Stephen Chbosky - The Perks of Being a Wallflower


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The Perks of
Being A
Wallflower
by
Stephen Chbosky
   
Published by: POCKET BOOKS, Simon and Schuster Inc., 1230
Avenue of the Americas, New York, NY 10020.
Copyright 1999 by Stephen Chbosky
BOOK JACKET INFORMATION
standing on the fringes of life ...  offers a unique perspective.  But
there comes a time to see what it looks like from the dance floor.
     This haunting novel about the dilemma of passivity vs.
passion marks the stunning debut of a provocative new voice in
contemporary fiction: The Perks Of Being A Wallflower.
     This is the story of what it's like to grow up in high school.
More intimate than a diary, Charlie's letters are singular and
unique, hilarious and devastating.  We may not know where he
lives.  We may not know to whom he is writing.  All we know is
the world he shares.  Caught between trying to live his life and
trying to run from it puts him on a strange course through
uncharted territory.  The world of first dates and mixed tapes,
family dramas and new friends.  The world of sex, drugs, and The
Rocky Horror Picture Show, when all one requires is that perfect
song on that perfect drive to feel infinite.
     Through Charlie, Stephen Chbosky has created a deeply
affecting coming-of-age story, powerful novel that will spirit you
back to those wild and poignant roller coaster days known as
growing up.
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Stephen Chbosky grew up in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, and
graduated from the University of Southern California's Filmic
Writing Program.  His first film, THE FOUR CORNERS OF
NOWHERE, premiered at the 1995 Sundance Film Festival and
went on to win Best Narrative Feature honors at the Chicago
Underground Film Festival.  He is the recipient of the Abraham
Polonsky Screenwriting Award for his screenplay
EVERYTHING DIVIDED as well as a participant in the
Sundance Institute's filmmakers' lab for his current project,
FINGERNAILS AND SMOOTH SKIN.  Chbosky lives in New
York.
     The Perks of Being a Wallflower is his first novel.
     This book is a work of fiction.  Names, characters, places and
incidents are products of the author's imagination or are used
fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events or locales or
persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.
   
For my family
   
Acknowledgements
     I just wanted to say about all those listed that there would be
no book without them, and I thank them with all of my heart.
     Greer Kessel Hendricks Heather Neely Lea, Fred, and Stacy
Chbosky Robbie Thompson Christopher McQuarrie Margaret
Mehring Stewart Stern Kate Degenhart Mark McClain Wilson
David Wilcox Kate Ward Tim Perell Jack Horner Eduardo Braniff
     And finally ...
     Dr.  Earl Reum for writing a beautiful poem   and Patrick
Comeaux for remembering it wrong when he was 14.
   
THE PERKS OF BEING A WALLFLOWER
Part 1
August 25, 1991
Dear friend,
     I am writing to you because she said you listen and understand
and didn't try to sleep with that person at that party even though
you could have.  Please don't try to figure out who she is because
then you might figure out who I am, and I really don't want you to
do that.  I will call people by different names or generic names
because I don't want you to find me.  I didn't enclose a return
address for the same reason.  I mean nothing bad by this.  Honest.
     I just need to know that someone out there listens and
understands and doesn't try to sleep with people even if they
could have.  I need to know that these people exist.
     I think you of all people would understand that because I think
you of all people are alive and appreciate what that means. At
least I hope you do because other people look to you for strength
and friendship and it's that simple.  At least that's what I've heard.
     So, this is my life.  And I want you to know that I am both
happy and sad and I'm still trying to figure out how that could be.
     I try to think of my family as a reason for me being this way,
especially after my friend Michael stopped going to school one
day last spring and we heard Mr.  Vaughn's voice on the
loudspeaker.
     "Boys and girls, I regret to inform you that one of our students
has passed on.  We will hold a memorial service for Michael
Dobson during assembly this Friday."
     I don't know how news travels around school and why it is
very often right.  Maybe it was in the lunchroom.  It's hard to
remember.  But Dave with the awkward glasses told us that
Michael killed himself.  His mom played bridge with one of
Michael's neighbors and they heard the gunshot.
     I don't really remember much of what happened after that
except that my older brother came to Mr.  Vaughn's office in my
middle school and told me to stop crying.  Then, he put his arm
on my shoulder and told me to get it out of my system before Dad
came home.  We then went to eat french fries at McDonald's and
he taught me how to play pinball.  He even made a joke that
because of me he got to skip an afternoon of school and asked me
if I wanted to help him work on his Camaro.  I guess I was pretty
messy because he never let me work on his Camaro before.
     At the guidance counselor sessions, they asked the few of us
who actually liked Michael to say a few words.  I think they were
afraid that some of us would try to kill ourselves or something
because they looked very tense and one of them kept touching his
beard.
     Bridget who is crazy said that sometimes she thought about
suicide when commercials come on during TV.  She was sincere
and this puzzled the guidance counselors.  Carl who is nice to
everyone said that he felt very sad, but could never kill himself
because it is a sin.
     This one guidance counselor went through the whole group
and finally came to me.
     "What do you think, Charlie?"
     What was so strange about this was the fact that I had never
met this man because he was a "specialist" and he knew my name
even though I wasn't wearing a name tag like they do in open
house.
     "Well, I think that Michael was a nice guy and I don't
understand why he did it.  As much as I feel sad, I think that not
knowing is what really bothers me."
     I just reread that and it doesn't sound like how I talk.
Especially in that office because I was crying still.  I never did
stop crying.
     The counselor said that he suspected that Michael had
"problems at home" and didn't feel like he had anyone to talk to.
That's maybe why he felt all alone and killed himself.
     Then, I started screaming at the guidance counselor that
Michael could have talked to me.  And I started crying even
harder.  He tried to calm me down by saying that he meant an
adult like a teacher or a guidance counselor.  But it didn't work
and eventually my brother came by the middle school in his
Camaro to pick me up.
     For the rest of the school year, the teachers treated me
different and gave me better grades even though I didn't get any
smarter.  To tell you the truth, I think I made them all nervous.
     Michael's funeral was strange because his father didn't cry.
And three months later he left Michael's mom.  At least according
to Dave at lunchtime.  I think about it sometimes.  I wonder what
went on in Michael's house around dinner and TV shows.
Michael never left a note or at least his parents didn't let anyone
see it.  Maybe it was "problems at home." I wish I knew.  It might
make me miss him more clearly.  It might have made sad sense.
     One thing I do know is that it makes me wonder if I have
"problems at home" but it seems to me that a lot of other people
have it a lot worse.  Like when my sister's first boyfriend started
going around with another girl and my sister cried for the whole
weekend.
     My dad said, "There are other people who have it a lot worse."
     And my mom was quiet.  And that was that.  A month later,
my sister met another boy and started playing happy records
again.  And my dad kept working.  And my mom kept sweeping.
And my brother kept fixing his Camaro.  That is, until he left for
college at the beginning of the summer.  He's playing football for
Penn State but he needed the summer to get his grades right to
play football.
     I don't think that there is a favorite kid in our family.  There
are three of us and I am the youngest.  My brother is the oldest.
He is a very good football player and likes his car.  My sister is
very pretty and mean to boys and she is in the middle.  I get
straight A's now like my sister and that is why they leave me
alone.
     My mom cries a lot during TV programs.  My dad works a lot
and is an honest man.  My Aunt Helen used to say that my dad
was going to be too proud to have a midlife crisis.  It took me
until around now to understand what she meant by that because
he just turned forty and nothing has changed.
     My Aunt Helen was my favorite person in the whole world.
She was my mom's sister.  She got straight A's when she was a
teenager and she used to give me books to read.  My father said
that the books were a little too old for me, but I liked them so he
just shrugged and let me read.
     My Aunt Helen lived with the family for the last few years of
her life because something very bad happened to her. Nobody
would tell me what happened then even though I always wanted
to know.  When I was around seven, I stopped asking about it
because I kept asking like kids always do and my Aunt Helen
started crying very hard.
     That's when my dad slapped me, saying, "You're hurting your
aunt Helen's feelings!" I didn't want to do that, so I stopped.
Aunt Helen told my father not to hit me in front of her ever again
and my father said this was his house and he would do what he
wanted and my mom was quiet and so were my brother and sister.
     I don't remember much more than that because I started crying
really hard and after a while my dad had my mom take me to my
room.  It wasn't until much later that my mom had a few glasses
of white wine and told me what happened to her sister.  Some
people really do have it a lot worse than I do.  They really do.
     I should probably go to sleep now.  It's very late.  I don't know
why I wrote a lot of this down for you to read.  The reason I
wrote this letter is because I start high school tomorrow and I am
really afraid of going.
     Love always,
     Charlie
   
September 7, 1991
Dear friend,
     I do not like high school.  The cafeteria is called the "Nutrition
Center," which is strange.  There is this one girl in my advanced
english class named Susan.  In middle school, Susan was very fun
to be around.  She liked movies, and her brother Frank made her
tapes of this great music that she shared with us.  But over the
summer she had her braces taken off, and she got a little taller and
prettier and grew breasts. Now, she acts a lot dumber in the
hallways, especially when boys are around.  And I think it's sad
because Susan doesn't look as happy.  To tell you the truth, she
doesn't like to admit she's in the advanced english class, and she
doesn't like to say "hi" to me in the hall anymore.
     When Susan was at the guidance counselor meeting about
Michael, she said that Michael once told her that she was the
prettiest girl in the whole world, braces and all.  Then, he asked
her to "go with him," which was a big deal at any school.  They
call it "going out" in high school.  And they kissed and talked
about movies, and she missed him terribly because he was her
best friend.
     It's funny, too, because boys and girls normally weren't best
friends around my school.  But Michael and Susan were.  Kind of
like my Aunt Helen and me.  I'm sorry.  "My Aunt Helen and I."
That's one thing I learned this week.  That and more consistent
punctuation.
     I keep quiet most of the time, and only one kid named Sean
really seemed to notice me.  He waited for me after gym class and
said really immature things like how he was going to give me a
"swirlie," which is where someone sticks your head in the toilet
and flushes to make your hair swirl around.  He seemed pretty
unhappy as well, and I told him so.  Then, he got mad and started
hitting me, and I just did the things my brother taught me to do.
My brother is a very good fighter.
     "Go for the knees, throat, and eyes."
     And I did.  And I really hurt Sean.  And then I started crying.
And my sister had to leave her senior honors class and drive me
home.  I got called to Mr.  Small's office, but I didn't get
suspended or anything because a kid told Mr.  Small the truth
about the fight.
     "Sean started it.  It was self-defense."
     And it was.  I just don't understand why Sean wanted to hurt
me.  I didn't do anything to him.  I am very small.  That's true.
But I guess Sean didn't know I could fight.  The truth is I could
have hurt him a lot worse.  And maybe I should have.  I thought I
might have to if he came after the kid who told Mr.  Small the
truth, but Sean never did go after him.  So, everything was
forgotten.
     Some kids look at me strange in the hallways because I don't
decorate my locker, and I'm the one who beat up Sean and
couldn't stop crying after he did it.  I guess I'm pretty emotional.
     It has been very lonely because my sister is busy being the
oldest one in our family.  My brother is busy being a football
player at Penn State.  After the training camp, his coach said that
he was second string and that when he starts learning the system,
he will be first string.
     My dad really hopes he will make it to the pros and play for the
Steelers.  My mom is just glad he gets to go to college for free
because my sister doesn't play football, and there wouldn't be
enough money to send both of them.  That's why she wants me to
keep working hard, so I'll get an academic scholarship.
     So, that's what I'm doing until I meet a friend here.  I was
hoping that the kid who told the truth could become a friend of
mine, but I think he was just being a good guy by telling.
     Love always,
     Charlie
   
September 11, 1991
Dear friend,
     I don't have a lot of time because my advanced english teacher
assigned us a book to read, and I like to read books twice.
Incidentally, the book is To Kill a Mockingbird.  If you haven't
read it, I think you should because it is very interesting.  The
teacher has assigned us a few chapters at a time, but I do not like
to read books like that.  I am halfway through the first time.
     Anyway, the reason I am writing to you is because I saw my
brother on television.  I normally don't like sports too much, but
this was a special occasion.  My mother started crying, and my
father put his arm around her shoulder, and my sister smiled,
which is funny because my brother and sister always fight when
he's around.
     But my older brother was on television, and so far, it has been
the highlight of my two weeks in high school.  I miss him terribly,
which is strange, because we never really talked much when he
was here.  We still don't talk, to be honest.
     I would tell you his position, but like I said, I would like to be
anonymous to you.  I hope you understand.
     Love always,
     Charlie
   
September 16, 1991
Dear friend,
     I have finished To Kill a Mockingbird.  It is now my favorite
book of all time, but then again, I always think that until I read
another book. My advanced english teacher asked me to call him
"Bill" when we're not in class, and he gave me another book to
read.  He says that I have a great skill at reading and
understanding language, and he wanted me to write an essay
about To Kill a Mockingbird.
     I mentioned this to my mom, and she asked why Bill didn't
recommend that I just take a sophomore or junior english class.
And I told her that Bill said that these were basically the same
classes with more complicated books, and that it wouldn't help
me.  My mom said that she wasn't sure and would talk to him
during open house.  Then, she asked me to help her by washing
the dishes, which I did.
     Honestly, I don't like doing dishes.  I like eating with my
fingers and off napkins, but my sister says that doing so is bad for
the environment.  She is a part of the Earth Day Club here in high
school, and that is where she meets the boys.  They are all very
nice to her, and I don't really understand why except maybe the
fact that she is pretty. She really is mean to these boys.
     One boy has it particularly hard.  I won't tell you his name.
But I will tell you all about him.  He has very nice brown hair, and
he wears it long with a ponytail.  I think he will regret this when
he looks back on his life.  He is always making mix tapes for my
sister with very specific themes.  One was called "Autumn
Leaves." He included many songs by the Smiths.  He even
hand-colored the cover.  After the movie he rented was over, and
he left, my sister gave me the tape.
     "Do you want this, Charlie?"
     I took the tape, but I felt weird about it because he had made it
for her.  But I listened to it.  And loved it very much.  There is
one song called "Asleep" that I would like you to listen to.  I told
my sister about it.  And a week later she thanked me because
when this boy asked her about the tape, she said exactly what I
said about the song "Asleep," and this boy was very moved by
how much it meant to her.  I hope this means I will be good at
dating when the time comes.
     I should stick to the subject, though.  That is what my teacher
Bill tells me to do because I write kind of the way I talk.  I think
that is why he wants me to write that essay about To Kill a
Mockingbird.
     This boy who likes my sister is always respectful to my
parents.  My mom likes him very much because of this.  My dad
thinks he's soft.  I think that's why my sister does what she does
to him.
     This one night, she was saying very mean things about how he
didn't stand up to the class bully when he was fifteen or
something like that.  To tell you the truth, I was just watching the
movie he had rented, so I wasn't paying very close attention to
their fight.  They fight all the time, so I figured that the movie
was at least something different, which it wasn't because it was a
sequel.
     Anyway, after she leaned into him for about four movie scenes,
which I guess is about ten minutes or so, he started crying.
Crying very hard.  Then, I turned around, and my sister pointed at
me.
     "You see.  Even Charlie stood up to his bully.  You see."
     And this guy got really red-faced.  And he looked at me.  Then,
he looked at her.  And he wound up and hit her hard across the
face.  I mean hard.  I just froze because I couldn't believe he did it.
 It was not like him at all to hit anybody.  He was the boy that
made mix tapes with themes and hand-colored covers until he hit
my sister and stopped crying.
     The weird part is that my sister didn't do anything.  She just
looked at him very quietly.  It was so weird.  My sister goes crazy
if you eat the wrong kind of tuna, but here was this guy hitting
her, and she didn't say anything.  She just got soft and nice.  And
she asked me to leave, which I did.  After the boy had left, she
said that they were "going out" and not to tell mom or dad what
happened.
     I guess he stood up to his bully.  And I guess that makes sense.
     That weekend, my sister spent a lot of time with this boy.  And
they laughed a lot more than they usually did.  On Friday night, I
was reading my new book, but my brain got tired, so I decided to
watch some television instead.  And I opened the door to the
basement, and my sister and this boy were naked.
     He was on top of her, and her legs were draped over either
side of the couch.  And she screamed at me in a whisper.
     "Get out.  You pervert."
     So, I left.  The next day, we all watched my brother play
football.  And my sister invited this boy over.  I am not sure when
he left the previous night.  They held hands and acted like
everything was happy.  And this boy said something about how
the football team hasn't been the same since my brother
graduated, and my dad thanked him.  And when the boy left, my
dad said that this boy was becoming a fine young man who could
carry himself.  And my mom was quiet.  And my sister looked at
me to make sure I wouldn't say anything.  And that was that.
     "Yes.  He is." That's all my sister could say.  And I could see
this boy at home doing his homework and thinking about my
sister naked.  And I could see them holding hands at football
games that they do not watch.  And I could see this boy throwing
up in the bushes at a party house.  And I could see my sister
putting up with it.
     And I felt very bad for both of them.
     Love always,
     Charlie
   
September 18, 1991
Dear friend,
     I never told you that I am in shop class, did I? Well, I am in
shop class, and it is my favorite class next to Bill's advanced
english class. I wrote the essay for To Kill a Mockingbird last
night, and I handed it in to Bill this morning. We are supposed to
talk about it tomorrow during lunch period.
     The point, though, is that there is a guy in shop class named
"Nothing." I'm not kidding.  His name is "Nothing." And he is
hilarious.  "Nothing" got his name when kids used to tease him in
middle school.  I think he's a senior now.  The kids started calling
him Patty when his real name is Patrick.  And "Nothing" told
these kids, "Listen, you either call me Patrick, or you call me
nothing."
     So, the kids started calling him "Nothing." And the name just
stuck.  He was a new kid in the school district at the time because
his dad married a new woman in this area.  I think I will stop
putting quotation marks around Nothing's name because it is
annoying and disrupting my flow. I hope you do not find this
difficult to follow.  I will make sure to differentiate if something
comes up.
     So, in shop class Nothing started to do a very funny
impersonation of our teacher, Mr.  Callahan.  He even painted in
the muttonchop sideburns with a grease pencil.  Hilarious.  When
Mr.  Callahan found Nothing doing this near the belt sander, he
actually laughed because Nothing wasn't doing the impersonation
mean or anything.  It was just that funny.  I wish you could have
been there because it was the hardest I've laughed since my
brother left.  My brother used to tell Polish jokes, which I know is
wrong, but I just blocked out the Polish part and listened to the
jokes.  Hilarious.
     Oh, incidentally, my sister asked for her "Autumn Leaves" mix
tape back.  She listens to it all the time now.
     Love always,
     Charlie
   
September 29, 1991
Dear friend,
     There is a lot to tell you about the last two weeks.  A lot of it
is good, but a lot of it is bad.  Again, I don't know why this
always happens.
     First of all, Bill gave me a C on my To Kill a Mockingbird
essay because he said that I run my sentences together.  I am
trying now to practice not to do that.  He also said that I should
use the vocabulary words that I learn in class like "corpulent" and
"jaundice." I would use them here, but I really don't think they are
appropriate in this format.
     To tell you the truth, I don't know where they are appropriate
to use.  I'm not saying that you shouldn't know them.  You should
absolutely.  But I just have never heard anyone use the words
"corpulent" and "jaundice" ever in my life.  That includes teachers.
 So, what's the point of using words nobody else knows or can
say comfortably? I just don't understand that.
     I feel the same way about some movie stars who are terrible to
watch.  Some of these people must have a million dollars at least,
and yet, they keep doing these movies.  They blow up bad guys.
They yell at their detectives.  They do interviews for magazines.
Every time I see this one particular movie star on a magazine, I
can't help but feel terribly sorry for her because nobody respects
her at all, and yet they keep interviewing her.  And the interviews
all say the same thing.
     They start with what food they are eating in some restaurant.
"As ---- gingerly munched her Chinese Chicken Salad, she spoke
of love." And all the covers say the same thing: "---- gets to the
bottom of stardom, love, and hissther hit new moviesttelevision
showstalbum."
     I think it's nice for stars to do interviews to make us think they
are just like us, but to tell you the truth, I get the feeling that it's
all a big lie.  The problem is I don't know who's lying.  And I
don't know why these magazines sell as much as they do.  And I
don't know why the ladies in the dentist's office like them as
much as they do.  A Saturday ago, I was in the dentist's office,
and I heard this conversation.
     "Did you see that movie?" as she points to the cover.
     "I did.  I saw it with Harold."
     "What do you think?"
     "She is just lovely."
     "Yeah.  She is."
     "Oh, I have this new recipe."
     "Low-fat?"
     "Uh-huh."
     "Do you have some time tomorrow?"
     "No.  Why don't you have Mike fax it to Harold?"
     "Okay."
     Then, these ladies started talking about the one star I
mentioned before, and they both had very strong opinions.
     "I think it's disgraceful."
     "Did you read the interview in Good Housekeeping?"
     "A few months back?"
     "Uh-huh."
     "Disgraceful."
     "Did you read the one in Cosmopolitan?"
     "No."
     "God, it was practically the same interview."
     "I don't know why they give her the time of day."
     The fact that one of these ladies was my mom made me feel
particularly sad because my mom is beautiful. And she's always on
a diet.  Sometimes, my dad calls her beautiful, but she cannot hear
him.  Incidentally, my dad is a very good husband.  He's just
pragmatic.
     After the dentist's office, my mom drove me to the cemetery
where a lot of her relatives are buried. My dad does not like to go
to the cemetery because it gives him the creeps.  But I don't mind
going at all because my Aunt Helen is buried there.  My mom was
always the pretty one, as they say, and my Aunt Helen was always
the other one.  The nice thing was my Aunt Helen was never on a
diet.  And my Aunt Helen was "corpulent." Hey, I did it!
     My Aunt Helen would always let us kids stay up and watch
Saturday Night Live when she was baby-sitting or when she was
living with us and my parents went to another couple's house to
get drunk and play board games. When I was very little, I
remember going to sleep, while my brother and sister and Aunt
Helen watched Love Boat and Fantasy Island.  I could never stay
awake when I was that little, and I wish I could, because my
brother and sister talk about those moments sometimes.  Maybe
it's sad that these are now memories.  And maybe it's not sad.
And maybe it's just the fact that we loved Aunt Helen, especially
me, and this was the time we could spend with her.
     I won't start listing television episode memories, except one
because I guess we're on the subject, and it seems like something
everyone can relate to in a small way.  And since I don't know
you, I figure that maybe I can write about something that you can
relate to.
     The family was sitting around, watching the final episode of
More"inA"inSo"inHave, and I'll never forget it even though I was
very young.  My mom was crying.  My sister was crying.  My
brother was using every ounce of strength he had not to cry.  And
my dad left during one of the final moments to make a sandwich.
Now, I don't remember much about the program itself because I
was too young, but my dad never left to make a sandwich except
during commercial breaks, and then he usually just sent my mom.
I walked to the kitchen, and I saw my dad making a sandwich ...
and crying.  He was crying harder than even my mom.  And I
couldn't believe it.  When he finished making his sandwich, he
put away the things in the refrigerator and stopped crying and
wiped his eyes and saw me.
     Then, he walked up, patted my shoulder, and said, "This is our
little secret, okay, champ?"
     "Okay," I said.
     And Dad picked me up with the arm that wasn't holding the
sandwich, and carried me to the room that had the television, and
put me on his lap for the rest of the television episode.  At the end
of the episode, he picked me up, turned off the TV, and turned
around.
     And my dad declared, "That was a great series."
     And my mom said, "The best."
     And my sister asked, "How long was it on the air?"
     And my brother replied, "Nine years, stupid."
     And my sister responded, "You ...  stupid."
     And my dad said, "Stop it, right now."
     And my mom said, "Listen to your father."
     And my brother said nothing.
     And my sister said nothing.
     And years later I found out my brother was wrong.
     I went to the library to look up the figures, and I found out
that the episode we watched is the highest watched anything of
television history, which I find amazing because it felt like just the
five of us.
     You know ...  a lot of kids at school hate their parents.  Some
of them got hit.  And some of them got caught in the middle of
wrong lives.  Some of them were trophies for their parents to
show the neighbors like ribbons or gold stars.  And some of them
just wanted to drink in peace.
     For me personally, as much as I don't understand my mom and
dad and as much as I feel sorry for both of them sometimes, I
can't help but love them very much.  My mom drives to visit the
cemetery of people she loves.  My dad cried during
More"inA"inSo"inHave, and trusted me to keep his secret, and let
me sit on his lap, and called me "champ."
     Incidentally, I only have one cavity, and as much as my dentist
asks me to, I just can't bring myself to floss.
     Love always,
     Charlie
   
October 6, 1991
Dear friend,
     I feel very ashamed.  I went to the high school football game
the other day, and I don't know exactly why.  In middle school,
Michael and I would go to the games sometimes even though
neither of us were popular enough to go.  It was just a place to go
on Fridays when we didn't want to watch television.  Sometimes,
we would see Susan there, and she and Michael would hold
hands.
     But this time, I went alone because Michael is gone, and
Susan hangs around different boys now, and Bridget is still crazy,
and Carl's mom sent him to a Catholic school, and Dave with the
awkward glasses moved away.  I was just kind of watching
people, seeing who was in love and who was just hanging
around, and I saw that kid I told you about.  Remember Nothing?
Nothing was there at the football game, and he was one of the
few people who was not an adult that was actually watching the
game.  I mean really watching the game.  He would yell things
out.
     "Can'mon, Brad!" That's the name of our quarterback.
     Now, normally I am very shy, but Nothing seemed like the
kind of guy you could just walk up to at a football game even
though you were three years younger and not popular.
     "Hey, you're in my shop class!" He's a very friendly person.
     "I'm Charlie." I said, not too shy.
     "And I'm Patrick.  And this is Sam." He pointed to a very
pretty girl next to him.  And she waved to me.
     "Hey, Charlie." Sam had a very nice smile.
     They both told me to have a seat, and they both seemed to
mean it, so I took a seat.  I listened to Nothing yell at the field.
And I listened to his play-by-play analysis.  And I figured out that
this was a kid who knew football very well.  He actually knew
football as well as my brother.  Maybe I should call Nothing
"Patrick" from now on since that is how he introduced himself,
and that is what Sam calls him.
     Incidentally, Sam has brown hair and very very pretty green
eyes.  The kind of green that doesn't make a big deal about itself.
I would have told you that sooner, but under the stadium lights,
everything looked kind of washed out.  It wasn't until we went to
the Big Boy, and Sam and Patrick started to chain-smoke that I
got a good look at her.  The nice thing about the Big Boy was the
fact that Patrick and Sam didn't just throw around inside jokes
and make me struggle to keep up.  Not at all.  They asked me
questions.
     "How old are you, Charlie?"
     "Fifteen."
     "What do you want to do when you grow up?"
     "I don't know just yet."
     "What's your favorite band?"
     "I think maybe the Smiths because I love their song `Asleep,'
but I'm really not sure one way or the other because I don't know
any other songs by them too well."
     "What's your favorite movie?"
     "I don't know really.  They're all the same to me."
     "How about your favorite book?"
     "This Side of Paradise by From.  Scott Fitzgerald."
     "Why?"
     "Because it was the last one I read."
     This made them laugh because they knew I meant it honest,
not show-off.  Then they told me their favorites, and we sat quiet.
 I ate the pumpkin pie because the lady said it was in season, and
Patrick and Sam smoked more cigarettes.
     I looked at them, and they looked really happy together.  A
good kind of happy.  And even though I thought Sam was very
pretty and nice, and she was the first girl I ever wanted to ask on
a date someday when I can drive, I did not mind that she had a
boyfriend, especially if he was a good guy like Patrick.
     "How long have you been `going out'?" I asked.
     Then, they started laughing.  Really laughing hard.
     "What's so funny?" I said.
     "We're brother and sister," Patrick said, still laughing.
     "But you don't look alike," I said.
     That's when Sam explained that they were actually stepsister
and stepbrother since Patrick's dad married Sam's mom.  I was
very happy to know that because I would really like to ask Sam
on a date someday.  I really would.  She is so nice.
     I feel ashamed, though, because that night, I had a weird
dream.  I was with Sam.  And we were both naked.  And her legs
were spread over the sides of the couch.  And I woke up.  And I
had never felt that good in my life.  But I also felt bad because I
saw her naked without her permission.  I think that I should tell
Sam about this, and I really hope it does not prevent us from
maybe making up inside jokes of our own.  It would be very nice
to have a friend again.  I would like that even more than a date.
     Love always,
     Charlie
   
October 14, 1991
Dear friend,
     Do you know what "masturbation" is? I think you probably do
because you are older than me.  But just in case, I will tell you.
Masturbation is when you rub your genitals until you have an
orgasm.  Wow!
     I thought that in those movies and television shows when they
talk about having a coffee break that they should have a
masturbation break.  But then again, I think this would decrease
productivity.
     I'm only being cute here.  I don't really mean it.  I just wanted
to make you smile.  I meant the "wow" though.
     I told Sam that I dreamt that she and I were naked on the sofa,
and I started crying because I felt bad, and do you know what she
did? She laughed.  Not a mean laugh, either.  A really nice, warm
laugh.  She said that she thought I was being cute.  And she said
it was okay that I had a dream about her.  And I stopped crying.
Sam then asked me if I thought she was pretty, and I told her I
thought she was "lovely." Sam then looked me right in the eye.
     "You know you're too young for me, Charlie? You do know
that?"
     "Yes, I do."
     "I don't want you to waste your time thinking about me that
way."
     "I won't.  It was just a dream."
     Sam then gave me a hug, and it was strange because my family
doesn't hug a lot except my Aunt Helen.  But after a few
moments, I could smell Sam's perfume, and I could feel her body
against me.  And I stepped back.
     "Sam, I'm thinking about you that way."
     She just looked at me and shook her head.  Then, she put her
arm around my shoulder and walked me down the hallway.  We
met Patrick outside because they didn't like to go to class
sometimes.  They preferred to smoke.
     "Charlie has a Charlie-esque crush on me, Patrick."
     "He does, huh?"
     "I'm trying not to," I offered, which just made them laugh.
     Patrick then asked Sam to leave, which she did, and he
explained some things to me, so I would know how to be around
other girls and not waste my time thinking about Sam that way.
     "Charlie, has anyone told you how it works?"
     "I don't think so."
     "Well, there are rules you follow here not because you want to,
but because you have to.  You get it?"
     "I guess so."
     "Okay.  You take girls, for example.  They're copying their
moms and magazines and everything to know how to act around
guys."
     I thought about the moms and the magazines and the
everythings, and the thought made me nervous, especially if it
includes TV.
     "I mean it's not like in the movies where girls like assholes or
anything like that.  It's not that easy.  They just like somebody
that can give them a purpose."
     "A purpose?"
     "Right.  You know? Girls like guys to be a challenge.  It gives
them some mold to fit in how they act.  Like a mom.  What
would a mom do if she couldn't fuss over you and make you clean
your room? And what would you do without her fussing and
making you do it? Everyone needs a mom.  And a mom knows
this.  And it gives her a sense of purpose.  You get it?"
     "Yeah," I said even though I didn't.  But I got it enough to say
"Yeah" and not be lying, though.
     "The thing is some girls think they can actually change guys.
And what's funny is that if they actually did change them, they'd
get bored.  They'd have no challenge left.  You just have to give
girls some time to think of a new way of doing things, that's all.
Some of them will figure it out here.  Some later.  Some never.  I
wouldn't worry about it too much."
     But I guess I did worry about it.  I've been worrying about it
ever since he told me.  I look at people holding hands in the
hallways, and I try to think about how it all works.  At the school
dances, I sit in the background, and I tap my toe, and I wonder
how many couples will dance to "their song." In the hallways, I
see the girls wearing the guys' jackets, and I think about the idea
of property.  And I wonder if anyone is really happy.  I hope they
are.  I really hope they are.
     Bill looked at me looking at people, and after class, he asked
me what I was thinking about, and I told him.  He listened, and
he nodded and made "affirmation" sounds.  When I had finished,
his face changed into a "serious talk" face.
     "Do you always think this much, Charlie?"
     "Is that bad?" I just wanted someone to tell me the truth.
     "Not necessarily.  It's just that sometimes people use thought
to not participate in life."
     "Is that bad?"
     "Yes."
     "I think I participate, though.  Don't you think I am?"
     "Well, are you dancing at these dances?"
     "I'm not a very good dancer."
     "Are you going on dates?"
     "Well, I don't have a car, and even if I did, I can't drive
because I'm fifteen, and anyway, I haven't met a girl I like except
for Sam, but I am too young for her, and she would always have
to drive, which I don't think is fair."
     Bill smiled and continued asking me questions.  Slowly, he got
to "problems at home." And I told him about the boy who makes
mix tapes hitting my sister because my sister only told me not to
tell mom or dad about it, so I figured I could tell Bill. He got this
very serious look on his face after I told him, and he said
something to me I don't think I will forget this semester or ever.
     "Charlie, we accept the love we think we deserve."
     I just stood there, quiet.  Bill patted my shoulder and gave me
a new book to read.  He told me everything was going to be okay.
     I usually walk home from school because it makes me feel like
I've earned it.  What I mean is that I want to be able to tell my
kids that I walked to school like my grandparents did in the "old
days." It's odd that I'm planning this considering I've never had a
date, but I guess that makes sense.  It usually takes me an extra
hour or so to walk as opposed to taking the bus, but it's worth it
when the weather is nice and cool like it was today.
     When I finally got home, my sister was sitting on a chair.  My
mom and my dad were standing in front of her.  And I knew that
Bill had called home and told them.  And I felt terrible.  It was all
my fault.
     My sister was crying.  My mom was very very quiet.  My dad
did all the talking.  He said that my sister was not allowed to see
the boy who hit her anymore, and he was going to have a talk
with the boy's parents tonight.  My sister then said that it was all
her fault, that she was provoking him, but my dad said it was no
excuse.
     "But I love him!" I had never seen my sister cry that much.
     "No, you don't."
     "I hate you!"
     "No, you don't." My dad can be very calm sometimes.
     "He's my whole world."
     "Don't ever say that about anyone again.  Not even me." That
was my mom.
     My mom chooses her battles carefully, and I can tell you one
thing about my family.  When my mom does say something, she
always gets her way.  And this time was no exception.  My sister
stopped crying immediately.
     After that, my dad gave my sister a rare kiss on the forehead.
Then, he left the house, got in his Oldsmobile, and drove away.  I
thought he probably was going to talk to the boy's parents.  And I
felt very sorry for them.  `from
     parents, I mean.  Because my dad doesn't lose fights.  He just
doesn't.
     My mom then went into the kitchen to make my sister's
favorite thing to eat, and my sister looked at me.
     "I hate you."
     My sister said it different than she said it to my dad.  She
meant it with me.  She really did.
     "I love you," was all I could say in return.
     "You're a freak, you know that? You've always been a freak.
Everyone says so.  They always have."
     "I'm trying not to be."
     Then, I turned around and walked to my room and closed my
door and put my head under my pillow and let the quiet put things
where they are supposed to be.
     By the way, I figure you are probably curious about my dad.
Did he hit us when we were kids or now even? I just thought you
might be curious because Bill was, after I told him about that boy
and my sister.  Well, if you are wondering, he didn't.  He never
touched my brother or sister.  And the only time he ever slapped
me was when I made my Aunt Helen  cry.  And once we all
calmed down, he got on his knees in front of me and said that his
stepdad hit him a lot, and he decided in college when my mom
got pregnant with my older brother that he would never hit his
kids.  And he felt terrible for doing it.  And he was so sorry.  And
he would never hit me again.  And he hasn't.
     He's just stern sometimes.
     Love always,
     Charlie
   
October 15, 1991
Dear friend,
     I guess I forgot to mention in my last letter that it was Patrick
who told me about masturbation.  I guess I also forgot to tell you
how often I do it now, which is a lot.  I don't like to look at
pictures.  I just close my eyes and dream about a lady I do not
know.  And I try not to feel ashamed.  I never think about Sam
when I do it.  Never.  That's very important to me because I was
so happy when she said "Charlie-esque" since it felt like an inside
joke of sorts.
     One night, I felt so guilty that I promised God that I would
never do it again.  So, I started using blankets, but then the
blankets hurt, so I started using pillows, but then the pillows hurt,
so I went back to normal.  I wasn't raised very religiously because
my parents went to Catholic school, but I do believe in God very
much.  I just never gave God a name, if you know what I mean.  I
hope I haven't let Him down regardless.
     Incidentally, my dad did have a serious talk with the boy's
parents.  The boy's mother was very very angry and screamed at
her son.  The boy's father kept quiet.  And my dad didn't get too
personal with them.  He didn't tell them they did a "lousy job"
raising their son or anything.
     As far as he was concerned, the only important thing was
getting their help to keep their son away from his daughter.  Once
that was settled, he left them to deal with their family and came
home to deal with his.  At least that's how he put it.
     The one thing I did ask my dad was about the boy's problems
at home.  Whether or not he thought the parents hit their son.  He
told me to mind my own business.  Because he didn't know and
would never ask and didn't think it mattered.
     "Not everyone has a sob story, Charlie, and even if they do, it's
no excuse."
     That's all he said.  And then we went to watch television.
     My sister is still mad at me, but my dad said I did the right
thing.  I hope that I did, but it's hard to tell sometimes.
   
Love always,
     Charlie
   
October 28, 1991
Dear friend,
     I'm sorry I haven't written to you in a couple of weeks, but I
have been trying to "participate" like Bill said.  It's strange
because sometimes, I read a book, and I think I am the people in
the book.  Also, when I write letters, I spend the next two days
thinking about what I figured out in my letters.  I do not know if
this is good or bad.  Nevertheless, I am trying to participate.
     Incidentally, the book Bill gave me was Peter Pan by Just.
More.  Barrie.  I know what you're thinking.  The cartoon Peter
Pan with the lost boys.  The actual book is so much better than
that.  It's just about this boy who refuses to grow up, and when
Wendy grows up, he feels very betrayed.  At least that's what I
got out of it.  I think Bill gave me the book to teach me a lesson
of some kind.
     The good news is that I read the book, and because of its
fantasy nature, I could not pretend that I was in the book.  That
way I could participate and still read.
     In terms of my participation in things, I am trying to go to
social events that they set up in my school. It's too late to join any
clubs or anything like that, but I still try to go to the things that I
can.  Things like the homecoming football game and dance, even
if I don't have a date.
     I cannot imagine that I will ever come home for a homecoming
game after I leave here, but it was fun to pretend that I was.  I
found Patrick and Sam sitting in their normal spot in the
bleachers, and I started acting like I hadn't seen them in a year
even though I had seen them that afternoon in lunch when I ate
my orange, and they smoked cigarettes.
     "Patrick, is that you? And Sam ...  it's been so long.  Who's
winning? God, college is such a trial.  My professor is making me
read twenty-seven books this weekend, and my girlfr needs me to
paint signs for her protest rally Tuesday.  Let those administrators
know we mean business.  Dad is busy with his golf swing, and
Mom has her hands full with tennis.  We must do this again.  I
would stay, but I have to pick my sister up from her emotional
workshop.  She's making real progress.  Good to see ya."
     And then I walked away.  I went down to the concession stand
and bought three boxes of nachos and a diet coke for Sam.  When
I returned, I sat down and gave Patrick and Sam the nachos and
Sam her diet coke.  And Sam smiled.  The great thing about Sam
is that she doesn't think I'm crazy for pretending to do things.
Patrick doesn't either, but he was too busy watching the game
and screaming at Brad, the quarterback.
     Sam told me during the game that they were going over to
their friend's house later for a party.  Then, she asked me if I
wanted to go, and I said yes because I had never been to a party
before.  I had seen one at my house, though.
     My parents went to Ohio to see a very distant cousin get
buried or married.  I don't remember which.  And they left my
brother in charge of the house.  He was sixteen at the time.  My
brother used the opportunity to throw a big party with beer and
everything.  I was ordered to stay in my room, which was okay
because that's where everyone kept their coats, and it was fun
looking through the stuff in their pockets.  Every ten minutes or
so, a drunk girl or boy would stumble in my room to see if they
could make out there or something.  Then, they would see me and
walk away.  That is, except for this one couple.
     This one couple, whom I was told later were very popular and
in love, stumbled into my room and asked if I minded them using
it.  I told them that my brother and sister said I had to stay here,
and they asked if they could use the room anyway with me still in
it.  I said I didn't see why not, so they closed the door and started
kissing.  Kissing very hard.  After a few minutes, the boy's hand
went up the girl's shirt, and she started protesting.
     "Can'mon, Dave."
     "What?"
     "The kid's in here."
     "It's okay."
     And the boy kept working up the girl's shirt, and as much as
she said no, he kept working it.  After a few minutes, she stopped
protesting, and he pulled her shirt off, and she had a white bra on
with lace.  I honestly didn't know what to do by this point.  Pretty
soon, he took off her bra and started to kiss her breasts.  And then
he put his hand down her pants, and she started moaning.  I think
they were both very drunk.  He reached to take off her pants, but
she started crying really hard, so he reached for his own.  He
pulled his pants and underwear down to his knees.
     "Please.  Dave.  No."
     But the boy just talked soft to her about how good she looked
and things like that, and she grabbed his penis with her hands and
started moving it.  I wish I could describe this a little more nicely
without using words like penis, but that was the way it was.
     After a few minutes, the boy pushed the girl's head down, and
she started to kiss his penis.  She was still crying.  Finally, she
stopped crying because he put his penis in her mouth, and I don't
think you can cry in that position.  I had to stop watching at that
point because I started to feel sick, but it kept going on, and they
kept doing other things, and she kept saying "no." Even when I
covered my ears, I could still hear her say that.
     My sister came in eventually to bring me a bowl of potato
chips, and when she found the boy and the girl, they stopped.  My
sister was very embarrassed, but not as embarrassed as the girl.
The boy looked kind of smug.  He didn't say much.  After they
left, my sister turned to me.
     "Did they know you were in here?"
     "Yes.  They asked if they could use the room."
     "Why didn't you stop them?"
     "I didn't know what they were doing."
     "You pervert," was the last thing my sister said before she left
the room, still carrying the bowl of potato chips.
     I told Sam and Patrick about this, and they both got very quiet.
 Sam said that she used to go out with Dave for a while before
she got into punk music, and Patrick said he heard about that
party.  I wasn't surprised that he did because it kind of became a
legend.  At least that's what I've heard when I tell some kids who
my older brother is.
     When the police came, they found my brother asleep on the
roof.  Nobody knows how he got there.  My sister was making
out in the laundry room with some senior.  She was a freshman at
the time.  A lot of parents came to the house then to pick up their
kids, and a lot of the girls were crying and throwing up. Most of
the boys had run away by this point.  My brother got in big
trouble, and my sister was given a "serious talk" by my parents
about bad influences. And that was that.
     The boy named Dave is a senior now.  He plays on the football
team.  He is a wide receiver.  I watched the end of the game
when Dave caught a touchdown thrown from Brad.  It ended up
winning the game for our school.  And people went crazy in the
stands because we won the game.  But all I could think about
was that party.  I thought about it quiet for a long time, then I
looked over to Sam.
     "He raped her, didn't he?"
     She just nodded.  I couldn't tell if she was sad or just knew
more things than me.
     "We should tell someone, shouldn't we?"
     Sam just shook her head this time.  She then explained about
all the things you have to go through to prove it, especially in
high school when the boy and girl are popular and still in love.
     The next day at the homecoming dance, I saw them dancing
together.  Dave and his girl.  And I got really mad.  It kind of
scared me how mad I got.  I thought about walking up to Dave
and really hurting him like maybe I should have really hurt Sean.
And I think I would have, but Sam saw me and put her arm
around my shoulder like she does.  She calmed me down, and I
guess I'm glad she did because I think I would have gotten even
madder if I started hitting Dave, and his girl stopped me because
she loved him.  I think I would have gotten even madder about
that.
     So, I decided to do the next best thing and let the air out of
Dave's tires.  Sam knew which was his car.
     There is a feeling that I had Friday night after the homecoming
game that I don't know if I will ever be able to describe except to
say that it is warm.  Sam and Patrick drove me to the party that
night, and I sat in the middle of Sam's pickup truck. Sam loves
her pickup truck because I think it reminds her of her dad.  The
feeling I had happened when Sam told Patrick to find a station on
the radio.  And he kept getting commercials.  And commercials.
And a really bad song about love that had the word "baby" in it.
And then more commercials.  And finally he found this really
amazing song about this boy, and we all got quiet.
     Sam tapped her hand on the steering wheel.  Patrick held his
hand outside the car and made air waves.  And I just sat between
them.  After the song finished, I said something.
     "I feel infinite."
     And Sam and Patrick looked at me like I said the greatest
thing they ever heard.  Because the song was that great and
because we all really paid attention to it.  Five minutes of a
lifetime were truly spent, and we felt young in a good way.  I have
since bought the record, and I would tell you what it was, but
truthfully, it's not the same unless you're driving to your first real
party, and you're sitting in the middle seat of a pickup with two
nice people when it starts to rain.
     We got to the house where the party was, and Patrick did this
secret knock.  It would be hard to describe to you this knock
without sound.  The door opened a crack, and this guy with frizzy
hair looked out at us.
     "Patrick known as Patty known as Nothing?"
     "Bob."
     The door opened, and the old friends hugged each other.
Then, Sam and Bob hugged each other.  Then, Sam spoke.
     "This is our friend, Charlie."
     And you won't believe it.  Bob hugged me! Sam told me as we
were hanging up our coats that Bob was "baked like a fucking
cake." I really had to quote that one even though it has a swear.
     The party was in the basement of this house.  The room was
quite smoky, and the kids were much older.  There were two girls
showing each other their tattoos and belly button rings.  Seniors, I
think.
     This guy named Fritz something was eating a lot of Twinkies.
Fritz's girlfr was talking to him about women's rights, and he kept
saying, "I know, baby."
     Sam and Patrick started smoking cigarettes.  Bob went up to
the kitchen when he heard the bell ring.  When he came back, he
brought a can of Milwaukee's Best beer for everyone, as well as
two new party guests.  There was Maggie, who needed to use the
bathroom.  And there was Brad, the quarterback of the high
school football team.  No kidding!
     I do not know why this excited me, but I guess when you see
somebody in the hallway or on the field or something, it's nice to
know that they are a real person.
     Everyone was very friendly to me and asked me a lot of
questions about myself.  I guess because I was the youngest, and
they didn't want me to feel out of place, especially after I said no
to having a beer.  I once had a beer with my brother when I was
twelve, and I just didn't like it.  It's really that simple for me.
     Some of the questions I was asked was what grade I was in
and what did I want to be when I grow up.
     "I am a freshman, and I don't know just yet."
     I looked around, and I saw that Sam and Patrick had left with
Brad.  That's when Bob started passing around food.
     "Would you like a brownie?"
     "Yes.  Thank you."
     I was actually quite hungry because normally Sam and Patrick
take me to the Big Boy after the football games, and I guess I was
used to it by now.  I ate the brownie, and it tasted a little weird,
but it was still a brownie, so I still liked it.  But this was not an
ordinary brownie.  Since you are older, I think you know what
kind of brownie it was.
     After thirty minutes, the room started to slip away from me.  I
was talking to one of the girls with the belly button ring, and she
seemed like she was in a movie.  I started blinking a lot and
looking around, and the music sounded heavy like water.
     Sam came down and when she saw me, she turned to Bob.
     "What the hell is your problem?"
     "Come on, Sam.  He likes it.  Ask him."
     "How do you feel, Charlie?"
     "Light."
     "You see?" Bob actually looked a little nervous, which I was
later told was paranoia.
     Sam sat down next to me and held my hand, which felt cool.
     "Are you seeing anything, Charlie?"
     "Light."
     "Does it feel good?"
     "Uh-huh."
     "Are you thirsty?"
     "Uh-huh."
     "What would you like to drink?"
     "A milkshake."
     And everyone in the room, except Sam, erupted in laughter.
     "He's stoned."
     "Are you hungry, Charlie?"
     "Uh-huh."
     "What would you like to eat?"
     "A milkshake."
     I don't think they would have laughed any harder even if what
I said was at all funny.  Then, Sam took my hand and stood me up
on the dizzy floor.
     "Can'mon.  We'll get you a milkshake."
     As we were leaving, Sam turned to Bob.
     "I still think you're an asshole."
     All Bob did was laugh.  And Sam finally laughed, too.  And I
was glad that everyone seemed as happy as they seemed.
     Sam and I got up to the kitchen, and she turned on the light.
Wow! It was so bright, I couldn't believe it.  It was like when you
see a movie in the theater during the day, and when you leave the
movie, you can't believe that it's still daylight outside.  Sam got
some ice cream and some milk and a blender.  I asked her where
the bathroom was, and she pointed around the corner almost like
it was her house.  I think she and Patrick spent a lot of time here
when Bob was still in high school.
     When I got out of the bathroom, I heard a noise in the room
where we left our coats.  I opened the door, and I saw Patrick
kissing Brad.  It was a stolen type of kissing.  They heard me in
the door and turned around.  Patrick spoke first.
     "Is that you, Charlie?"
     "Sam's making me a milkshake."
     "Who is this kid?" Brad just looked real nervous and not in the
Bob way.
     "He's a friend of mine.  Relax."
     Patrick then took me out of the room and closed the door.  He
put his hands on both of my shoulders and looked me straight in
the eye.
     "Brad doesn't want people to know."
     "Why?"
     "Because he's scared."
     "Why?"
     "Because he is ...  wait ...  are you stoned?"
     "They said I was downstairs.  Sam is making me a milkshake."
     Patrick tried to keep from laughing.
     "Listen, Charlie.  Brad doesn't want people to know.  I need
you to promise that you won't tell anyone.  This will be our little
secret.  Okay?"
     "Okay."
     "Thanks."
     With that, Patrick turned around and went back into the room.
 I heard some muffled voices, and Brad seemed upset, but I didn't
think it was any of my business, so I went back to the kitchen.
     I have to say that it was the best milkshake I ever had in my
life.  It was so delicious, it almost scared me.
     Before we left the party, Sam played me a few of her favorite
songs.  One was called "Blackbird." The other was called "MLK."
They were both very beautiful.  I mentioned the titles because
they were as great when I listened to them sober.
     Another interesting thing happened at the party before we left.
 Patrick came downstairs.  I guess Brad had left.  And Patrick
smiled.  And Bob started to make fun of him having a crush on
the quarterback.  And Patrick smiled more.  I don't think I ever
saw Patrick smile so much.  Then, Patrick pointed at me, and said
something to Bob.
     "He's something, isn't he?"
     Bob nodded his head.  Patrick then said something I don't
think I'll ever forget.
     "He's a wallflower."
     And Bob really nodded his head.  And the whole room nodded
their head.  And I started to feel nervous in the Bob way, but
Patrick didn't let me get too nervous.  He sat down next to me.
     "You see things.  You keep quiet about them.  And you
understand."
     I didn't know that other people thought things about me.  I
didn't know that they looked.  I was sitting on the floor of a
basement of my first real party between Sam and Patrick, and I
remembered that Sam introduced me as her friend to Bob.  And I
remembered that Patrick had done the same for Brad.  And I
started to cry.  And nobody in that room looked at me weird for
doing it.  And then I really started to cry.
     Bob raised his drink and asked everyone to do the same.
     "To Charlie."
     And the whole group said, "To Charlie."
     I didn't know why they did that, but it was very special to me
that they did.  Especially Sam.  Especially her.
     I would tell you more about the homecoming dance, but now
that I'm thinking about it, me letting out the air of Dave's tires
was the best part.  I did try to dance like Bill suggested, but I
usually like songs you can't dance to, so I didn't do it too much.
Sam did look very pretty in her dress, but I was trying not to
notice because I'm trying not to think of her that way.
     I did notice that Brad and Patrick never talked once during the
whole dance because Brad was off dancing with a cheerleader
named Nancy, who is his girlfr.  And I did notice that my sister
was dancing with the boy she wasn't supposed to even though a
different boy picked her up at the house.
     After the dance, we left in Sam's pickup.  Patrick was driving
this time.  As we were approaching the Fort Pitt Tunnel, Sam
asked Patrick to pull to the side of the road.  I didn't know what
was going on.  Sam then climbed in the back of the pickup,
wearing nothing but her dance dress.  She told Patrick to drive,
and he got this smile on his face.  I guess they had done this
before.
     Anyway, Patrick started driving really fast, and just before we
got to the tunnel, Sam stood up, and the wind turned her dress
into ocean waves.  When we hit the tunnel, all the sound got
scooped up into a vacuum, and it was replaced by a song on the
tape player.  A beautiful song called "Landslide." When we got
out of the tunnel, Sam screamed this really fun scream, and there
it was.  Downtown.  Lights on buildings and everything that
makes you wonder.  Sam sat down and started laughing.  Patrick
started laughing.  I started laughing.
     And in that moment, I swear we were infinite.
     Love always,
     Charlie
   
Part 2
November 7, 1991
Dear friend,
     It was one of those days that I didn't mind going to school
because the weather was so pretty.  The sky was overcast with
clouds, and the air felt like a warm bath.  I don't think I ever felt
that clean before.  When I got home, I had to mow the lawn for
my allowance, and I didn't mind one bit.  I just listened to the
music, and breathed in the day, and remembered things.  Things
like walking around the neighborhood and looking at the houses
and the lawns and the colorful trees and having that be enough.
     I do not know anything about Zen or things that the Chinese
or Indians do as part of their religion, but one of the girls from the
party with the tattoo and belly button ring has been a Buddhist
since July.  She talks about very little else except maybe how
expensive cigarettes are.  I see her at lunch sometimes, smoking
between Patrick and Sam.  Her name is Mary Elizabeth.
     Mary Elizabeth told me that the thing about Zen is that it
makes you connected to everything in the world.  You are part of
the trees and the grass and the dogs.  Things like that.  She even
explained how her tattoo symbolized this, but I can't remember
how.  So, I guess Zen is a day like this when you are part of the
air and remember things.
     One thing I remember is that the kids used to play a game.
What you would do is take a football or something, and one
person would have it, and all the other kids would try to tackle
that kid.  And then whoever got the ball next would run around
with it, and the kids would try to tackle him.  This could go on
for hours.  I never really understood the point of this game, but
my brother loved it.  He didn't like to run with the ball so much as
he liked to tackle people.  The kids called the game "smear the
queer." I didn't really think about what that means until now.
     Patrick told me the story about him and Brad, and now I
understand why Patrick didn't get angry at Brad at the
homecoming dance for dancing with a girl.  When they were both
juniors, Patrick and Brad were at a party together with the rest of
the popular kids.  Patrick actually used to be popular before Sam
bought him some good music.
     Patrick and Brad both got pretty drunk at this party.  Actually,
Patrick said that Brad was pretending to be a lot drunker than he
really was.  They were sitting in the basement with some girl
named Heather, and when she left to go to the bathroom, Brad
and Patrick were left alone.  Patrick said it was uncomfortable
and exciting for both of them.
     "You're in Mr.  Brosnahan's class, right?"
     "Have you ever gone to a Pink Floyd Laser Light Show?"
     "Beer before liquor.  Never sicker."
     When they ran out of small talk, they just looked at each other.
 And they ended up fooling around right there in the basement.
Patrick said it was like the weight of the whole world left both
their shoulders.
     But Monday in school, Brad kept saying the same thing.
     "Man, I was so wasted.  I don't remember a thing."
     He said it to everyone who was at the party.  He said it a few
times to the same people.  He even said it to Patrick.  Nobody
saw Patrick and Brad fool around, but Brad kept saying it
anyway.  That Friday, there was another party.  And this time,
Patrick and Brad got stoned although Patrick said that Brad was
pretending to be a lot more stoned than he really was.  And they
ended up fooling around again.  And Monday in school, Brad did
the same thing.
     "Man, I was so wasted.  I don't remember a thing."
     This went on for seven months.
     It got to a point where Brad was getting stoned or drunk
before school.  It's not like he and Patrick were fooling around in
school.  They only fooled around at parties on Fridays, but Patrick
said Brad couldn't even look at him in the hall, let alone speak
with him.  And it was hard, too, because Patrick really liked Brad.
     When summer came, Brad didn't have to worry about school
or anything, so his drinking and smoking got a lot worse.  There
was a big party at Patrick and Sam's house with the less than
popular crowd.  Brad showed up, which caused quite a stir
because he was popular, but Patrick kept a secret as to why Brad
came to the party.  When most people left, Brad and Patrick went
into Patrick's room.
     They had sex for the first time that night.
     I don't want to go into detail about it because it's pretty
private stuff, but I will say that Brad assumed the role of the girl
in terms of where you put things.  I think that's pretty important
to tell you.  When they were finished, Brad started to cry really
hard.  He had been drinking a lot.  And getting really really
stoned.
     No matter what Patrick did, Brad kept crying.  Brad wouldn't
even let Patrick hold him, which seems rather sad to me because
if I have sex with someone, I would want to hold them.
     Finally, Patrick just pulled up Brad's pants, and said to him.
     "Just pretend you're passed out."
     Then, Patrick got dressed and walked around the house to go
into the party from a different direction than his bedroom.  He
was also crying pretty bad, and he decided if anyone asked him,
he would say his eyes were red from smoking pot.  Finally, he
shook himself out of it and walked into the main party room.  He
acted really drunk.  He went to Sam.  "Have you seen Brad?" Sam
saw the look in Patrick's eyes.  Then, she spoke up to the party.
     "Hey, has anyone seen Brad?"
     Nobody at the party had, so a few people went to search for
him.  They finally found him in Patrick's room ...  asleep.
     Finally, Patrick called Brad's parents because he was really
worried about him.  He didn't tell them why, but he said that Brad
was really sick at this party and needed to be taken home. Brad's
parents did come, and Brad's father, along with some of the other
boys including Patrick, carried Brad to the car.
     Patrick doesn't know if Brad was really asleep or not at that
point, but if he wasn't, it was a good acting job.  Brad's parents
sent him to rehabilitation because Brad's father didn't want him to
miss his chance at a football scholarship.  Patrick didn't see Brad
for the rest of the summer.
     Brad's parents never did figure out why their son was getting
stoned and drunk all the time.  Neither did anybody else.  Except
the people who knew.
     When the school year started, Brad avoided Patrick a lot.  He
never went to the same parties as Patrick or anything until a little
over a month ago.  That was the night he threw rocks at Patrick's
window and told Patrick that nobody could know, and Patrick
understood.  They only see each other now at night on golf
courses and at parties like Bob's where the people are quiet and
understand these things.
     I asked Patrick if he felt sad that he had to keep it a secret, and
Patrick just said that he wasn't sad because at least now, Brad
doesn't have to get drunk or stoned to make love.
     Love always,
     Charlie
   
November 8, 1991
Dear friend,
     Bill gave me my first B in advanced English class for my paper
on Peter Pan! To tell you the truth, I don't know what I did
differently from the other papers.  He told me that my sense of
language is improving along with my sentence structure.  I think
it's great that I could be improving on these things without
noticing.  By the way, Bill gives me A's on my report cards and
letters to my parents.  The grades on these papers are just
between us.
     I have decided that maybe I want to write when I grow up.  I
just don't know what I would write.
     I thought about maybe writing for magazines just so I could
see an article that didn't say things like I mentioned before.  "As
---- wiped the honey mustard off of her lips, she spoke to me
about her third husband and the healing power of crystals." But
honestly, I think I would be a very bad reporter because I can't
imagine sitting across the table from a politician or a movie star
and asking them questions.  I think I would probably just ask for
their autograph for my mom or something.  I would probably get
fired for doing this.  So, I thought about maybe writing for a
newspaper instead because I could ask regular people questions,
but my sister says that newspapers always lie.  I do not know if
this is true, so I'll just have to see when I get older.
     I did start working for a fanzine called Punk Rocky.  It's this
xerox magazine about punk rock and The Rocky Horror Picture
Show.  I don't write for it, but I help out.
     Mary Elizabeth is in charge of it, just like she is in charge of
the local Rocky Horror Picture Show showings.  Mary Elizabeth
is a very interesting person because she has a tattoo that
symbolizes Buddhism and a belly button ring and wears her hair
to make somebody mad, but when she's in charge of something,
she acts like my dad when he comes home from a "long day." She
is a senior, and she says that my sister is a tease and a snob.  I told
her not to say anything like that about my sister again.
     Of all the things I've done this year so far, I think I like The
Rocky Horror Picture Show the best.  Patrick and Sam took me
to the theater to see it on Halloween night.  It's really fun because
all these kids dress up like the people in the movie, and they act
out the movie in front of the screen.  Also, people shout at the
movie on cue.  I guess you probably know this already, but I
thought I'd say it anyway in case you didn't.
     Patrick plays "Frank 'Not Furter." Sam plays "Janet." It is very
hard to watch the movie because Sam walks around in her
underwear when she plays Janet.  I am really trying not to think of
her that way, which is becoming increasingly difficult.
     To tell you the truth, I love Sam.  It's not a movie kind of love
either.  I just look at her sometimes, and I think she is the prettiest
and nicest person in the whole world.  She is also very smart and
fun.  I wrote her a poem after I saw her in The Rocky Horror
Picture Show, but I didn't show it to her because I was
embarrassed.  I would write it out for you, but I think that would
be disrespectful to Sam.
     The thing is that Sam is now going out with a boy named
Craig.
     Craig is older than my brother.  I think he may even be
twenty-one because he drinks red wine.  Craig plays "Rocky" in
the show.  Patrick says that Craig is "cut and hunky." I do not
know where Patrick finds his expressions.
     But I guess that he's right, Craig is cut and hunky.  He is also a
very creative person.  He's putting himself through the Art
Institute here by being a male model for JCPenney catalogs and
things like that.  He likes to take photographs, and I've seen a few
of them, and they are very good.  There is this one photograph of
Sam that is just beautiful.  It would be impossible to describe how
beautiful it is, but I'll try.
     If you listen to the song "Asleep," and you think about those
pretty weather days that make you remember things, and you
think about the prettiest eyes you've known, and you cry, and the
person holds you back, then I think you will see the photograph.
     I want Sam to stop liking Craig.
     Now, I guess maybe you think that's because I am jealous of
him.  I'm not.  Honest.  It's just that Craig doesn't really listen to
her when she talks.  I don't mean that he's a bad guy because he's
not.  It's just that he always looks distracted.
     It's like he would take a photograph of Sam, and the
photograph would be beautiful.  And he would think that the
reason the photograph was beautiful was because of how he took
it.  If I took it, I would know that the only reason it's beautiful is
because of Sam.
     I just think it's bad when a boy looks at a girl and thinks that
the way he sees the girl is better than the girl actually is.  And I
think it's bad when the most honest way a boy can look at a girl is
through a camera.  It's very hard for me to see Sam feel better
about herself just because an older boy sees her that way.
     I asked my sister about this, and she said that Sam has low
self-esteem.  My sister also said that Sam had a reputation when
she was a sophomore.  According to my sister, Sam used to be a
"blow queen." I hope you know what that means because I really
can't think about Sam and describe it to you.
     I am really in love with Sam, and it hurts very much.
     I did ask my sister about the boy at the dance.  She wouldn't
talk about it until I promised that I wouldn't tell anybody, not
even Bill.  So, I promised.  She said that she has been seeing this
boy secretly since Dad said she couldn't.  She says she thinks
about him when he's not there.  She says they're going to get
married after they both finish college, and he finishes law school.
     She told me not to worry because he hasn't hit her since that
night.  And she said not to worry because he won't hit her again.
She really didn't say any more other than that, although she kept
talking.
     It was nice sitting with my sister that night because she almost
never likes to talk to me.  I was surprised that she told me as
much as she did, but I guess that since she's keeping things secret,
she can't tell anybody.  And I guess she was just dying to tell
somebody.
     But as much as she told me not to, I do worry a lot about her.
She is my sister, after all.
     Love always,
     Charlie
   
November 12, 1991
Dear friend,
     I love Twinkies, and the reason I am saying that is because we
are all supposed to think of reasons to live. In science class, Mr.
As.  told us about an experiment where they got this rat or mouse,
and they put this rat or mouse on one side of a cage.  On the other
side of the cage, they put a little piece of food.  And this rat or
mouse would walk over to the food and eat.  Then, they put the
rat or mouse back on xsdc  original side, and this time, they put
electricity all through the floor where the rat or mouse would
have to walk to get the piece of food.  They did this for a while,
and the rat or mouse stopped going to get the food at a certain
amount of voltage. Then, they repeated the experiment, but they
replaced the food with something that gave the rat or mouse
intense pleasure. I don't know what it was that gave them intense
pleasure, but I am guessing it is some kind of rat or mouse nip.
Anyway, what the scientists found out was that the rat or mouse
would put up with a lot more voltage for the pleasure. Even more
than for the food.
     I don't know the significance of this, but I find it very
interesting.
     Love always,
     Charlie
   
November 15, 1991
Dear friend,
     It's starting to get cold and frosty here.  The pretty fall weather
is pretty much gone.  The good news is that we have holidays
coming up, which I love especially now because my brother will
be coming home soon.  Maybe even for Thanksgiving! At least I
hope he does for my mom.
     My brother hasn't called home in a few weeks now, and Mom
just keeps talking about his grades and sleeping habits and the
foods he eats, and my dad keeps saying the same thing.
     "He's not going to get injured."
     Personally, I like to think my brother is having a college
experience like they do in the movies.  I don't mean the big
fraternity party kind of movie.  More like the movie where the
guy meets a smart girl who wears a lot of sweaters and drinks
cocoa.  They talk about books and issues and kiss in the rain.  I
think something like that would be very good for him, especially
if the girl were unconventionally beautiful.  They are the best kind
of girls, I think.  I personally find "super models" strange.  I don't
know why this is.
     My brother, on the other hand, has posters of "super models"
and cars and beer and things like that on the walls in his room.  I
suppose if you add a dirty floor, it's probably what his dorm room
looks like.  My brother always hated making his bed, but he kept
his clothes closet very organized.  Go figure.
     The thing is, when my brother does call home, he doesn't say a
lot.  He talks about his classes a little bit, but mostly he talks
about the football team.  There is a lot of attention on the team
because they are very good, and they have some really big players.
 My brother said that one of the guys will probably be a
millionaire someday, but that he is "dumb as a post." I guess that's
pretty dumb.
     My brother told this one story where the whole team was
sitting around the locker room, talking about all the stuff they had
to do to get into college football.  They finally got around to
talking about SAT scores, which I have never taken.
     And this guy said, "I got a 710."
     And my brother said, "Math or verbal?"
     And the guy said, "Huh?"
     And the whole team laughed.
     I always wanted to be on a sports team like that.  I'm not
exactly sure why, but I always thought it would be fun to have
"glory days." Then, I would have stories to tell my children and
golf buddies.  I guess I could tell people about Punk Rocky and
walking home from school and things like that.  Maybe these are
my glory days, and I'm not even realizing it because they don't
involve a ball.
     I used to play sports when I was little, and I was actually very
good, but the problem was that it used to make me too
aggressive, so the doctors told my mom I would have to stop.
     My dad had glory days once.  I've seen pictures of him when
he was young.  He was a very handsome man.  I don't know any
other way to put it.  He looked like all old pictures look.  Old
pictures look very rugged and young, and the people in the
photographs always seem a lot happier than you are.
     My mother looks beautiful in old pictures.  She actually looks
more beautiful than anyone except maybe Sam.  Sometimes, I
look at my parents now and wonder what happened to make them
the way they are.  And then I wonder what will happen to my
sister when her boyfriend graduates from law school.  And what
my brother's face will look like on a football card, or what it will
look like if it is never on a football card.  My dad played college
baseball for two years, but he had to stop when Mom got
pregnant with my brother.  That's when he started working at the
office.  I honestly don't know what my dad does.
     He tells a story sometimes.  It is a great story.  It has to do
with the state championship for baseball when he was in high
school.  It was the bottom of the ninth inning, and there was a
runner on first.  There were two outs, and my dad's team was
behind by one run.  My dad was younger than most of the varsity
team because he was only a sophomore, and I think the team
thought he was going to blow the game.  He had all this pressure
on him.  He was really nervous.  And really scared.  But after a
few pitches, he said he started feeling "in the zone." When the
pitcher wound up and threw the next ball, he knew exactly where
that ball was going to be.  He hit it harder than any other ball he
ever hit in his whole life.  And he made a home run, and his team
won the state championship.  The greatest thing about this story
is that every time my dad tells it, it never changes.  He's not one
to exaggerate.
     I think about all this sometimes when I'm watching a football
game with Patrick and Sam.  I look at the field, and I think about
the boy who just made the touchdown.  I think that these are the
glory days for that boy, and this moment will just be another story
someday because all the people who make touchdowns and home
runs will become somebody's dad.  And when his children look at
his yearbook photograph, they will think that their dad was
rugged and handsome and looked a lot happier than they are.
     I just hope I remember to tell my kids that they are as happy as
I look in my old photographs. And I hope that they believe me.
     Love always,
     Charlie
   
November 18, 1991
Dear friend,
     My brother finally called yesterday, and he can't make it home
for any part of Thanksgiving weekend because he is behind on
school because of football.  My mom was so upset that she took
me shopping for new clothes.
     I know you think what I'm about to write is an exaggeration,
but I promise you that it isn't.  From the time we got into the car
to the time we came home, my mom literally did not stop talking.
Not once.  Not even when I was in the dressing room trying on
"slacks."
     She just stood outside the dressing room and worried out loud.
 The things she said went all over the place.  First, it was that my
dad should've insisted that my brother come home if only for an
afternoon.  Then, it was that my sister had better start thinking
more about her future and start applying to "safety" schools in
case the good ones don't work out.  And then she started saying
that gray was a good color for me.
     I understand how my mom thinks.  I really do.
     It's like when we were little, and we would go to the grocery
store.  My sister and brother would fight about things that my
sister and brother would fight about, and I would sit at the
bottom of the shopping cart.  And my mom would be so upset by
the end of shopping that she would push the cart fast, and I
would feel like I was in a submarine.
     Yesterday was like that except now I got to sit in the front
seat.
     When I saw Sam and Patrick at school today, they both agreed
that my mom has very good taste in clothing. I told my mom this
when I got home from school, and she smiled.  She asked me if I
wanted to invite Sam and Patrick over for dinner sometime after
the holidays are over because my mom gets nervous enough as it
is during the holidays.  I called Sam and Patrick, and they said
they would.
     I'm really excited!
     The last time I had a friend over to dinner was Michael last
year.  We had tacos.  The really great part was that Michael
stayed over to sleep.  We ended up sleeping very little.  We
mostly just talked about things like girls and movies and music.
The one part I remember distinctly was walking around the
neighborhood at night.  My parents were asleep along with the
rest of the houses.  Michael looked into all the windows.  It was
dark and quiet.
     He said, "Do you think those people are nice?"
     I said, "The Andersons? Yeah.  They're old."
     "What about those people?"
     "Well, Mrs.  Lambert doesn't like baseballs going into her
yard."
     "What about those people?"
     "Mrs.  Tanner has been visiting her mother for three months.
Mr.  Tanner spends his weekends sitting on the back porch and
listening to baseball games.  I don't really know if they're nice or
not because they don't have children."
     "Is she sick?"
     "Is who sick?"
     "Mrs.  Tanner's mother."
     "I don't think so.  My mom would know, and she didn't say
anything."
     Michael nodded.  "They're getting a divorce."
     "You think so?"
     "Uh-huh."
     We just kept walking.  Michael had a way of walking quiet
sometimes.  I guess I should mention that my mom heard that
Michael's parents are divorced now.  She said that only seventy
percent of marriages stay together when they lose a child.  I think
she read it in a magazine somewhere.
     Love always,
     Charlie
   
November 23, 1991
Dear friend,
     Do you enjoy holidays with your family? I don't mean your
mom and dad family, but your uncle and aunt and cousin family?
Personally, I do.  There are several reasons for this.
     First, I am very interested and fascinated by how everyone
loves each other, but no one really likes each other. Second, the
fights are always the same.
     They usually start when my mom's dad (my grandfather)
finishes his third drink.  It is around this time that he starts to talk
a lot.  My grandfather usually just complains about black people
moving into the old neighborhood, and then my sister gets upset
at him, and then my grandfather tells her that she doesn't know
what she's talking about because she lives in the suburbs. And
then he says how no one visits him in his retirement home.  And
finally he starts talking about all of the family's secrets, like how
cousin so-and-so "knocked up" that waitress from the Big Boy.  I
should probably mention that my grandfather can't hear very well,
so he says all of these things really loud.
     My sister tries to fight him, but she never wins.  My
grandfather is definitely more stubborn than she is.  My mom
usually helps her aunt prepare the food, which my grandfather
always says is "too dry" even if it's soup.  And her aunt will then
cry and lock herself in the bathroom.
     There is only one bathroom in my great aunt's house, so this
turns to trouble when all the beer starts to hit my cousins.  They
stand twisted in bladder positions and bang on the door for a few
minutes and almost coax my great aunt out, but then my
grandfather curses something at my great aunt, and the cycle
starts over again.  With the exception of the one holiday when my
grandfather passed out just after dinner, my cousins always have
to go to the bathroom outside in the bushes.  If you look out the
windows like I do, you can see them, and it looks like they're on
one of their hunting trips. I feel terribly sorry for my girl cousins
and my other great aunts because they don't really have the
bushes option, especially when it's cold.
     I should mention that my dad usually just sits real quiet and
drinks.  My dad is not a big drinker at all, but when he has to
spend time with my mom's family, he gets "loaded," as my cousin
Tommy says.  Deep down, I think my dad would rather spend the
holiday with his family in Ohio.  That way, he wouldn't have to
be around my grandfather.  He doesn't like my grandfather very
much, but he keeps quiet about it.  Even on the ride home.  He
just doesn't think it's his place.
     As the evening comes to an end, my grandfather is usually too
drunk to do much of anything.  My dad and my brother and my
cousins carry him out to the car of the person who is least angry
at him.  It has always been my job to open doors for them along
the way.  My grandfather is very fat.
     I remember there was one time that my brother drove my
grandfather back to the retirement home, and I rode along.  My
brother always understood my grandfather.  He rarely got angry at
him unless my grandfather said something mean about my mom
or sister or made a scene in public.  I remember it was snowing
really hard, and it was very quiet.  Almost peaceful.  And my
grandfather calmed down and started talking a different kind of
talk.
     He told us that when he was sixteen, he had to leave school
because his dad died, and someone had to support the family.  He
talked about the time when he had to go to the mill three times a
day to see if there was any work for him.  And he talked about
how cold it was.  And how hungry he was because he made sure
his family always ate before him.  Things he said we just wouldn't
understand because we were lucky.  Then, he talked about his
daughters, my mom and Aunt Helen.
     "I know how your mom feels about me.  I know Helen, too.
There was one time ...  I went to the mill ...  no work ...  none. ...
I came home at two in the morning ...  pissed and pissed ...  your
grandmother showed me their report cards ...  C-plus average ...
and these were smart girls.  So, I went into their room and I beat
some sense into them ...  and when it was done and they were
crying, I just held up their report cards and said ...  `This will
never happen again.' She still talks about it ...  your mother ...  but
you know something ...  it never did happen again ...  they went
to college ...  both of them.  I just wish I could have sent them ...
I always wanted to send them. ...  I wish Helen could have
understood that.  I think your mother did ...  deep down ...  she's a
good woman ...  you should be proud of her."
     When I told my mom about this, she just looked very sad
because he could never say those things to her.  Not ever.  Not
even when he walked her down the aisle.
     But this Thanksgiving was different.  It was my brother's
football game, which we brought a VCR tape of for my relatives
to watch.  The whole family was gathered around the TV, even
my great aunts, who never watch football.  I'll never forget the
looks on their faces when my brother took the field.  It was a
mixture of all things.  My one cousin works in a gas station.  And
my other cousin has been out of work for two years since he
injured his hand.  And my other cousin has been wanting to go
back to college for around seven years.  And my dad said once
that they were very jealous of my brother because he had a shot in
life and was actually doing something about it.
     But in that moment when my brother took the field, all that
washed away, and everyone was proud.  At one point, my brother
made a very big play on third down, and everyone cheered even
though some of us had already seen the game before.  I looked up
at my dad, and he was smiling.  I looked at my mom, and she was
smiling even though she was nervous about my brother getting
hurt, which was strange because it was a VCR tape of an old
game, and she knew he didn't get hurt.  My great aunts and my
cousins and their children and everyone were also smiling.  Even
my sister.  There were only two people who weren't smiling.  My
grandfather and I.
     My grandfather was crying.
     The kind of crying that is quiet and a secret.  The kind of
crying that only I noticed.  I thought about him going into my
mom's room when she was little and hitting my mom and holding
up her report card and saying that her bad grades would never
happen again.  And I think now that maybe he meant my older
brother.  Or my sister.  Or me.  That he would make sure that he
was the last one to work in a mill.
     I don't know if that's good or bad.  I don't know if it's better to
have your kids be happy and not go to college.  I don't know if it's
better to be close with your daughter or make sure that she has a
better life than you do.  I just don't know.  I was just quiet, and I
watched him.
     When the game was over and dinner was finished, everyone
said what they were thankful for.  A lot of it had to do with my
brother or family or children or God.  And everyone meant it
when they said it regardless of what would happen tomorrow.
When it came to my turn I thought about it a lot because this was
my first time sitting at the big table with all the grown-ups since
my brother wasn't here to take his seat.
     "I'm thankful that my brother played football on television so
nobody fought."
     Most of the people around the table looked uncomfortable.
Some looked angry.  My dad looked like he knew I was right, but
he didn't want to say anything because it wasn't his family.  My
mom was nervous about what her dad would do.  Only one
person at the table said anything.  It was my great aunt, the one
who usually locks herself in the bathroom.
     "Amen."
     And somehow that made it all right.
     When we were all getting ready to leave, I walked up to my
grandfather and gave him a hug and a kiss on the cheek.  He
wiped my lip print off with his palm and gave me a look.  He
doesn't like the boys in the family to touch him.  But I'm very glad
that I did it anyway in case he dies.  I never got to do that with
my Aunt Helen.
     Love always,
     Charlie
   
December 7, 1991
Dear friend,
     Have you ever heard of a thing called "Secret Santa?" It's this
activity where a group of friends draw names out of a hat, and
they are supposed to buy a lot of Christmas presents for whatever
person they choose.  The presents are "secretly" placed in their
lockers when they're not there.  Then, at the end, you have a
party, and all the people reveal who they really are as they give
their last presents.
     Sam started doing this with her group of friends three years
ago.  Now, it's some tradition.  And supposedly the party at the
end is always the best of the year.  It happens the night after our
last day of school before the break.
     I don't know who got me.  I got Patrick.
     I'm really glad I got Patrick even though I wished for Sam.  I
haven't seen Patrick in a few weeks except in shop class because
he has been spending most of his time with Brad, so thinking
about presents is a good way to think about him.
     The first present is going to be a mix tape.  I just know that it
should.  I already have the songs picked and a theme.  It's called
"One Winter." But I've decided not to hand-color the cover.  The
first side has a lot of songs by the Village People and Blondie
because Patrick likes that type of music a lot.  It also has Smells
Like Teen Spirit by Nirvana, which Sam and Patrick love.  But
the second side is the one I like the most.  It has winter kind of
songs.
Here they are:
Asleep by the Smiths
Vapour Trail by Ride
Scarborough Fair by Simon and Garfunkel
A Whiter Shade of Pale by Procol Harum
Time of No Reply by Nick Drake
Dear Prudence by the Beatles
Gypsy by Suzanne Vega
Nights in White Satin by the Moody Blues
Daydream by Smashing Pumpkins
Dusk by Genesis (before Phil Collins was even in the band!)
MLK by Ubleb
Blackbird by the Beatles
Landslide by Fleetwood Mac
     And finally ...
Asleep by the Smiths (again!)
     I spent all night working on it, and I hope Patrick likes it as
much as I do.  Especially the second side.  I hope it's the kind of
second side that he can listen to whenever he drives alone and
feel like he belongs to something whenever he's sad.  I hope it can
be that for him.
     I had an amazing feeling when I finally held the tape in my
hand.  I just thought to myself that in the palm of my hand, there
was this one tape that had all of these memories and feelings and
great joy and sadness.  Right there in the palm of my hand.  And I
thought about how many people have loved those songs.  And
how many people got through a lot of bad times because of those
songs.  And how many people enjoyed good times with those
songs.  And how much those songs really mean.  I think it would
be great to have written one of those songs.  I bet if I wrote one
of them, I would be very proud.  I hope the people who wrote
thosef songs are happy.  I hope that they feel it's enough.  I really
do because they've made me happy.  And I'm only one person.
     I can't wait to get my driver's license.  It's coming up soon!
     Incidentally, I have not told you about Bill in a while.  But I
guess there's not a lot to tell because he just keeps giving me
books that he doesn't give his other students, and I keep reading
them, and he keeps asking me to write papers, and I do.  In the
last month or so, I have read The Great Gatsby and A Separate
Peace.  I am starting to see a real trend in the kind of books Bill
gives me to read.  And just like the tape of songs, it is amazing to
hold each of them in the palm of my hand.  They are all my
favorites.  All of them.
     Love always,
     Charlie
   
December 11, 1991
Dear friend,
     Patrick loved the tape! I think he knows that I'm his Secret
Santa, though, because I think he knows that only I would do a
tape like that.  He also knows what my handwriting looks like.  I
don't know why I don't think of these things until it's too late.  I
really should have saved it for my last present.
     Incidentally, I have thought of my second gift for Patrick.  It is
magnetic poetry.  Have you heard of this? In case you haven't, I
will explain.  Some guy or girl put a whole bunch of words on a
sheet of magnet and then cut the words into separate pieces.  You
put them on your refrigerator, and then you write poems while
you make a sandwich.  It's very fun.
     The gift from my Secret Santa wasn't anything special.  That
makes me sad.  I bet you anything that Mary Elizabeth is my
Secret Santa because only she would give me socks.
     Love always,
     Charlie
December 19, 1991
Dear friend,
     I have since received thrift store "slacks." I have also received
a tie, a white shirt, shoes, and an old belt.  I'm guessing that my
last gift at the party will be a suit coat because it's the only thing
left.  I was told by a typed note to wear everything I had been
given to the party.  I hope there is something behind this.
     The good news is that Patrick liked all my gifts very much.
Gift number three was a set of watercolor paints and some paper.
I thought he might like to get them even if he never uses them.
Gift number four was a harmonica and a book about playing it.  I
guess it's probably the same gift as the water colors, but I really
think that everyone should have watercolors, magnetic poetry,
and a harmonica.
     My last gift before the party is a book called The Mayor of
Castro Street.  It is about a man named Harvey Milk, who was a
gay leader in San Francisco.  I went to the library when Patrick
told me he was gay, and I did some research because I honestly
didn't know much about it.  I found an article about a
documentary movie about Harvey Milk.  And when I couldn't find
the movie, I just searched for his name, and I found this book.
     I have not read it myself, but the description on the book
seemed very good.  I hope that it means something to Patrick.  I
can't wait for the party, so I can give Patrick my party present.
Incidentally, I have taken all my finals for the semester, and it has
been very busy, and I would have told you all about it, but it just
doesn't seem as interesting as these other things that have to do
with holidays.
     Love always,
     Charlie
December 21, 1991
Dear friend,
     Wow.  Wow.  I can paint the picture for you if you like.  We
are all sitting in Sam and Patrick's house, which I had never seen
before.  It was a rich house.  Very clean.  And we were all giving
our final presents.  The outside lights were on, and it was
snowing, and it looked like magic.  Like we were somewhere
else.  Like we were someplace better.
     It was the first time I had ever met Sam and Patrick's parents.
They were so nice.  Sam's mom is very pretty and tells great
jokes.  Sam said she used to be an actress when she was younger.
Patrick's dad is very tall and has a great handshake.  He is also a
very good cook.  A lot of parents make you feel very awkward
when you meet them.  But not Sam and Patrick's.  They were
friendly all through dinner, and when dinner was over, they left so
we could have our party.  They didn't even check on us or
anything.  Not once.  They just let us pretend it was our house.
So, we decided to have the party in the "games" room, which had
no games but a great rug.
     When I revealed that I was Patrick's Secret Santa, everyone
laughed because everyone knew, and Patrick did his best
impersonation of being surprised, which was nice of him.  Then,
everyone asked what my last gift was, and I told them it was a
poem I read a long time ago. It was a poem that Michael made a
copy of for me.  And I have read it a thousand times since because
I don't know who wrote it.  I don't know if it was ever in a book
or a class.  And I don't know how old the person was.  But I
know that I want to know him or her.  I want to know that this
person is okay.
     So, everyone asked me to stand up and read the poem.  And I
wasn't shy because we were trying to act like grown-ups, and we
drank brandy.  And I was warm.  I'm still a little warm, but I have
to tell you this.  So, I stood up, and just before I read this poem, I
asked everyone if they knew who wrote it to please tell me.
     When I was done reading the poem, everyone was quiet.  A
very sad quiet.  But the amazing thing was that it wasn't a bad
sad at all.  It was just something that made everyone look around
at each other and know that they were there.  Sam and Patrick
looked at me.  And I looked at them.  And I think they knew.
Not anything specific really.  They just knew.  And I think that's
all you can ever ask from a friend.
     That's when Patrick put on the second side of the tape I made
for him and poured everyone another glass of brandy.  I guess we
all looked a little silly drinking it, but we didn't feel silly.  I can tell
you that.
     As the songs kept playing, Mary Elizabeth stood up.  But she
wasn't holding a suit coat.  It turns out that she wasn't my Secret
Santa at all.  She was the Secret Santa to the other girl with the
tattoo and belly button ring, whose real name is Alice. She gave
her some black nail polish that Alice had had her eye on.  And
Alice was very grateful.  I just sat there, looking around the room.
Looking for the suit coat.  Not knowing who could possibly be
holding it.
     Sam stood up next, and she gave Bob a handcrafted Native
American marijuana pipe, which seemed appropriate.
     More people gave more gifts.  And more hugs were
exchanged.  And finally, it came to the end.  No one was left
except for Patrick.  And he stood up and walked into the kitchen.
     "Does anyone want any chips?"
     Everyone did.  And he came out with three tubes of Pringles
and a suit coat.  And he walked up to me.  And he said that all the
great writers used to wear suits all the time.
     So, I put on the suit even though I didn't feel like I really
deserved to since all I write are essays for Bill, but it was such a
nice present, and everyone clapped their hands anyway.  Sam and
Patrick both agreed I looked handsome.  Mary Elizabeth smiled.  I
think it was the first time in my life I ever felt like I looked
"good." Do you know what I mean? That nice feeling when you
look in the mirror, and your hair's right for the first time in your
life? I don't think we should base so much on weight, muscles,
and a good hair day, but when it happens, it's nice.  It really is.
     The rest of the evening was very special.  Since a lot of people
were going away with their families to places like Florida and
Indiana, we all exchanged presents with the people we weren't
Secret Santas for.
     Bob gave Patrick an eighth of marijuana with a Christmas card
attached.  He even wrapped it.  Mary Elizabeth gave Sam
earrings.  So did Alice.  And Sam gave them earrings, too.  I think
that is a private girl thing.  I have to admit, I felt a little sad
because other than Sam and Patrick, nobody got me a present. I
guess I'm not that close with them, so it makes sense.  But I still
felt a little sad.
     And then it came to my turn.  I gave Bob a little plastic tube of
soap bubbles because it just seemed to fit his personality.  I guess
I was right.
     "Too much," was all he said.
     He spent the rest of the night blowing bubbles at the ceiling.
     Next was Alice.  I gave her a book by Anne Rice because she
is always talking about her.  And she looked at me like she
couldn't believe I knew she loved Anne Rice.  I guess she didn't
know how much she talked or how much I listen.  But she
thanked me all the same.  Next came Mary Elizabeth.  I gave her
forty dollars inside a card.  The card said something pretty simple:
"To be spent on printing Punk Rocky in color next time."
     And she looked at me funny.  Then, they all started to look at
me funny except for Sam and Patrick.  I think they started feeling
bad because they didn't get me anything.  But I don't think they
should have because I don't think that's the point really.  Mary
Elizabeth just smiled, and said thanks, and then stopped looking
at me in the eye.
     Last came Sam.  I had been thinking about this present for a
long time.  I think I thought about this present from the first time
I really saw her.  Not met her or saw her but the first time I really
saw her if you know what I mean.  There was a card attached.
     Inside the card, I told Sam that the present I gave her was
given to me by my Aunt Helen.  It was an old 45 record that had
the Beatles' song "Something." I used to listen to it all the time
when I was little and thinking about grown-up things.  I would go
to my bedroom window and stare at my reflection in the glass and
the trees behind it and just listen to the song for hours.  I decided
then that when I met someone I thought was as beautiful as the
song, I should give it to that person. And I didn't mean beautiful
on the outside.  I meant beautiful in all ways.  So, I was giving it
to Sam.
     Sam looked at me soft.  And she hugged me.  And I closed my
eyes because I wanted to know nothing but her arms.  And she
kissed my cheek and whispered so nobody could hear.
     "I love you."
     I knew that she meant it in a friend way, but I didn't care
because it was the third time since my Aunt Helen died that I
heard it from anyone.  The other two times were from my mom.
     After that, I couldn't believe that Sam actually got me a
present because I honestly thought that the "I love you" was it.
But she did get me a present.  And for the first time, something
nice like that made me smile and not cry.  I guess Sam and Patrick
went to the same thrift store because their gifts went together.
She took me to her room and stood me in front of her dresser,
which was covered in a pillowcase with pretty colors.  She lifted
off the pillowcase, and there I was, standing in my old suit,
looking at an old typewriter with a fresh ribbon.  Inside the
typewriter was a piece of white paper.
     On that piece of white paper, Sam wrote, "Write about me
sometime." And I typed something back to her, standing right
there in her bedroom.  I just typed.
     "I will."
     And I felt good that those were the first two words that I ever
typed on my new old typewriter that Sam gave me.  We just sat
there quiet for a moment, and she smiled.  And I moved to the
typewriter again, and I wrote something.
     "I love you, too."
     And Sam looked at the paper, and she looked at me.
     "Charlie ...  have you ever kissed a girl?"
     I shook my head no.  It was so quiet.
     "Not even when you were little?"
     I shook my head no again.  And she looked very sad.
     She told me about the first time she was kissed.  She told me
that it was with one of her dad's friends.  She was seven.  And
she told nobody about it except for Mary Elizabeth and then
Patrick a year ago.  And she started to cry.  And she said
something that I won't forget.  Ever.
     "I know that you know that I like Craig.  And I know that I
told you not to think of me that way.  And I know that we can't
be together like that.  But I want to forget all those things for a
minute.  Okay?"
     "Okay."
     "I want to make sure that the first person you kiss loves you.
Okay?"
     "Okay." She was crying harder now.  And I was, too, because
when I hear something like that I just can't help it.
     "I just want to make sure of that.  Okay?"
     "Okay."
     And she kissed me.  It was the kind of kiss that I could never
tell my friends about out loud.  It was the kind of kiss that made
me know that I was never so happy in my whole life.
     Once on a yellow piece of paper with green
     lines he wrote a poem And he called it "Chops" because that
was the name of his dog And that's what it was all about And his
teacher gave him an A and a gold star And his mother hung it on
the kitchen door and read it to his aunts
     That was the year Father Tracy took all the kids to the zoo And
he let them sing on the bus And his little sister was born with tiny
toenails and no hair And his mother and father kissed a lot And
the girl around the corner sent him a Valentine signed with a row
of X's and he had to ask his father what the X's meant And his
father always tucked him in bed at night And was always there to
do it Once on a piece of white paper with blue
     lines he wrote a poem And he called it "Autumn" because that
was the name of the season And that's what it was all about And
his teacher gave him an A and asked him to write more clearly
And his mother never hung it on the kitchen door because of its
new paint And the kids told him that Father Tracy smoked cigars
And left butts on the pews And sometimes they would burn holes
That was the year his sister got glasses with thick lenses and black
frames And the girl around the corner laughed when he asked her
to go see Santa Claus And the kids told him why his mother and
father kissed a lot And his father never tucked him in bed at night
And his father got mad when he cried for him to do it.
     Once on a paper torn from his notebook he wrote a poem And
he called it "Innocence: A Question" because that was the
question about his girl And that's what it was all about And his
professor gave him an A and a strange steady look And his
mother never hung it on the kitchen door because he never
showed her That was the year that Father Tracy died And he
forgot how the end of the Apostle's Creed went And he caught his
sister making out on the back porch And his mother and father
never kissed or even talked And the girl around the corner wore
too much makeup That made him cough when he kissed her but
he kissed her anyway because that was the thing to do And at
three A.M.  he tucked himself into bed his father snoring soundly
That's why on the back of a brown paper bag he tried another
poem And he called it "Absolutely Nothing" Because that's what it
was really all about And he gave himself an A and a slash on
each damned wrist And he hung it on the bathroom door because
this time he didn't think he could reach the kitchen.
     That was the poem I read for Patrick.  Nobody knew who
wrote it, but Bob said he heard it before, and he heard that it was
some kid's suicide note.  I really hope it wasn't because then I
don't know if I like the ending.
     Love always,
     Charlie
   
December 23, 1991
Dear friend,
     Sam and Patrick left with their family for the Grand Canyon
yesterday.  I don't feel too bad about it because I can still
remember Sam's kiss.  It feels peaceful and right.  I even
considered not washing my lips like they do on TV, but then I
thought it would get too gross.  So, instead I spent today walking
around the neighborhood.  I even got out my old sled and my old
scarf.  There is something cozy about that for me.
     I walked over to the hill where we used to go and sled.  There
were a lot of little kids there.  I watched them flying.  Doing
jumps and having races.  And I thought that all those little kids
are going to grow up someday.  And all of those little kids are
going to do the things that we do.  And they will all kiss someone
someday.  But for now, sledding is enough.  I think it would be
great if sledding were always enough, but it isn't.
     I'm really glad that Christmas and my birthday are soon
because that means they will be over soon because I can already
feel myself going to a bad place I used to go.  After my Aunt
Helen was gone, I went to that place.  It got so bad that my mom
had to take me to a doctor, and I was held back a grade.  But now
I'm trying not to think about it too much because that makes it
worse.
     It's kind of like when you look at yourself in the mirror and you
say your name.  And it gets to a point where none of it seems real.
 Well, sometimes, I can do that, but I don't need an hour in front
of a mirror.  It happens very fast, and things start to slip away.
And I just open my eyes, and I see nothing.  And then I start to
breathe really hard trying to see something, but I can't.  It doesn't
happen all the time, but when it does, it scares me.
     It almost happened this morning, but I thought of Sam's kiss,
and it went away.
     I probably shouldn't be writing about this too much because it
brings it up too much.  It makes me think too much.  And I am
trying to participate.  It's just hard because Sam and Patrick are in
the Grand Canyon.
     Tomorrow, I'm going with my mom to buy presents for
everyone.  And then we are celebrating my birthday.  I was born
on December 24.  I don't know if I ever told you that.  It's a
strange birthday to have because it is so close to Christmas.  After
that, we are celebrating Christmas with my dad's family, and my
brother will be home for a little while. Then, I'm going out to take
my driver's test, so I will be busy while Sam and Patrick are gone.
     Tonight, I watched some television with my sister, but she
didn't want to watch the Christmas specials that were on, so I
decided to go upstairs and read.
     Bill gave me one book to read over the break.  It's The
Catcher in the Rye.  It was Bill's favorite book when he was my
age.  He said it was the kind of book you made your own.
     I read the first twenty pages.  I don't know how I feel about it
just yet, but it does seem appropriate to this time.  I hope Sam
and Patrick call on my birthday.  It would make me feel much
better.
     Love always,
     Charlie
   
December 25, 1991
Dear friend,
     I am sitting in my dad's old bedroom in Ohio.  The family is
still downstairs.  I really don't feel very well.  I don't know what's
wrong with me, but I'm starting to get scared.  I wish we were
going back home tonight, but we always sleep over.  I don't want
to tell my mom about it because it would just make her worry.dc
I would tell Sam and Patrick, but they didn't call yesterday.  And
we left this morning after we opened presents.  Maybe they called
this afternoon.  I hope they didn't call this afternoon because I
wasn't there.  I hope it's okay that I'm telling you this.  I just don't
know what else to do.  I always get sad when this happens, and I
wish Michael were here.  And I wish my Aunt Helen were here.  I
miss my Aunt Helen like this.  Reading the book isn't helping
either.  I don't know.  I'm just thinking too fast.  Much too fast.
It's like tonight.
     The family watched It's a Wonderful Life, which is a very
beautiful movie.  And all I could think was why didn't they make
the movie about Uncle Billy? George Bailey was an important
man in the town.  Because of him, a whole bunch of people got
to get out of the slums.  He saved a town, and when his dad died,
he was the only guy who could do it.  He wanted to live an
adventure, but he stayed behind and sacrificed his dreams for the
better good of the community.  And then when that made him
sad, he was going to kill himself.  He was going to die because
his life insurance money would have taken care of his family.
And then an angel comes down and shows him what life would
be if he had never been born.  How the whole town would have
suffered.  And how his wife would have been an "old maid." And
my sister didn't even say anything about how that's such an
old-fashioned thing, this year.  Every other year she says
something about how Mary was working for a living, and just
because she's not married, it doesn't mean that she is worthless.
But this year she didn't.  I didn't know why.  I thought it might be
about that secret boy of hers.  Or maybe it's what happened in the
car on the way over to our grandma's house.  I just wanted the
movie to be about Uncle Billy because he drank a lot and was fat
and lost the money in the first place.  I wanted the angel to come
down and show us how Uncle Billy's life had meaning.  Then, I
think I'd feel better.
     It started yesterday at home.  I don't like my birthday.  I don't
like it at all.  I went shopping with my mom and sister, and my
mom was in a bad mood because of parking spaces and lines.
And my sister was in a bad mood because she couldn't buy her
secret boy a present and hide it from Mom. She would have to
come back herself later.  And I felt weird.  Really weird, because
as I was walking around all the stores, I didn't know what present
my dad would like to receive from me.  I knew what to buy or
give Sam and Patrick, but I didn't know what I could buy or give
or make for my own dad.  My brother likes posters of girls and
beer cans.  My sister likes a haircut gift certificate.  My mom likes
old movies and plants.  My dad only likes golf, and that is not a
winter sport except for in Florida, and we don't live there.  And
he doesn't play baseball anymore.  He doesn't like to be even
reminded unless he tells the stories.  I just wanted to know what
to buy my dad because I love him.  And I don't know him.  And
he doesn't like to talk about things like that.
     "Well, why don't you chip in with your sister and buy him that
sweater?"
     "I don't want to.  I want to buy him something.  What kind of
music does he like?"
     My dad doesn't listen to music a lot anymore, and the stuff he
likes, he has.
     "What kind of books does he like to read?"
     My dad doesn't read books too much anymore because he
listens to books on cassette tapes on the way to work, and he gets
them free from the library.
     What kind of movies? What kind of anything?
     My sister decided to buy the sweater on her own.  And she
started to get mad at me because she needed time to come back to
the store to buy that present for her secret boyfriend.
     "Just buy him some golf balls, Charlie.  Jesus."
     "But that's a summer sport."
     "Mom.  Would you make him buy something?"
     "Charlie.  Calm down.  It's okay."
     I felt so sad.  I didn't know what was going on.  Mom was
trying to be really nice because when I get like this, she is the one
that tries real hard to keep things calm.
     "I'm sorry, Mom."
     "No.  Don't be sorry.  You want to get a nice present for your
father.  That's a good thing."
     "Mom!" My sister was really getting mad.
     My mom didn't even look at my sister.
     "Charlie, you can buy your father whatever you want.  I know
he'll love it.  Now, calm down.  It's okay."
     My mom took me to four different stores.  Each one my sister
just sat in the nearest chair and groaned.  I finally found the
perfect store.  It was a movie place.  And I found a videocassette
of the last episode of More"inA"inSo"inHave without the
commercials.  And I felt a lot better.  Then, I started telling Mom
about how we all watched it together.
     "She knows, Charlie.  She was there.  Let's go.  Duh."
     My mom told my sister to mind her own business, and she
listened to me tell the story that she already knew, leaving out the
part about my dad crying because that was our little secret.  My
mom even told me how I tell stories very well.  I love my mom.
And this time, I told her I loved her.  And she told me she loved
me, too.  And things were okay for a little while.
     We were sitting at the dinner table, waiting for my dad to
come home with my brother from the airport.  He was really late,
and my mom started to worry because it was snowing really hard
outside.  And she kept my sister at home because she needed help
with dinner.  She wanted it to be extra special for my brother and
for me because he was coming home, and it was my birthday. But
my sister just wanted to buy her boyfriend a present.  She was in a
really bad mood.  She was being like those bratty girls in movies
from the 1980's, and my mom kept saying "Young lady" after
every sentence.
     My dad finally called and said that because of the snow, my
brother's plane was going to be very late.  I just heard my mom's
side of the discussion.
     "But it's Charlie's birthday dinner ...  I don't expect you to do
anything about it ...  did he miss it? I'm just asking ...  I didn't say
it was your fault ...  no ...  I can't keep it warm ...  it'll be dry ...
what ...  but it's his favorite ...  well, what am I supposed to feed
them ...  of course they're hungry ...  you're already an hour late ...
well, you could have called ..."
     I don't know how long my mom was on the phone because I
couldn't stay at the table and listen.  I went into my room and
read.  I wasn't hungry anymore anyway.  I just wanted to be in a
quiet place.  After a little while, my mom came into the room.
She said that dad had just called again, and they should be home
in thirty minutes.  She asked me if anything was wrong, and I
knew that she didn't mean my sister, and I knew that she didn't
mean she and Dad fighting on the phone because that stuff just
happens sometimes.  She just noticed that I looked very sad
today, and she didn't think it was my friends leaving because I
looked okay yesterday when I came back from sledding.
     "Is it your aunt Helen?"
     It was the way she said it that started me feeling.
     "Please, don't do this to yourself, Charlie."
     But I did do it to myself.  Like I do every year on my birthday.
     "I'm sorry."
     My mom wouldn't let me talk about it.  She knows that I stop
listening and start to really breathe fast.  She covered my mouth
and wiped at my eyes.  I calmed down enough to make it
downstairs.  And I calmed down enough to be glad when my
brother came home.  And when we ate dinner, it wasn't too dry.
Then, we went outside to put up luminaria, which is an activity
where all our neighbors fill brown paper bags with sand and line
the street with them.  Then, we stick a candle in the sand of each
bag, and when we light the candles, it turns the street into a
"landing strip" for Santa Claus.  I love putting luminaria up every
year because it is very beautiful and a tradition and a good
distraction from my birthday.
     My family gave me some really nice birthday presents.  My
sister was still mad at me, but she got me a Smiths record anyway.
 And my brother got me a poster signed by the whole football
team.  My dad gave me some records that my sister told him to
buy.  And my mom gave me some of the books she loved when
she was a kid.  One of them was The Catcher in the Rye.
     I started reading my mom's copy from the place I left off with
Bill's copy.  And it made me not think about my birthday.  All I
thought was that I am going to take my driver's test sometime
soon enough.  That was a pretty good thing to think about.  And
then I thought about my driver's education class this past
semester.
     Mr.  Smith, who is kind of short and smells funny, wouldn't let
any of us turn on the radio as we rode around.  There were also
two sophomores, one boy and one girl.  They used to secretly
touch each other's legs in the backseat when it was my turn.
Then, there was me.  I wish I had a lot of stories about driver's
education class.  Sure, there were these movies about death on
the highway.  And sure there were police officers coming to talk
to us.  And sure it was fun to get my learner's permit, but Mom
and Dad said they didn't want me driving until I absolutely had to
because insurance is so expensive.  And I could never ask Sam to
drive her pickup truck.  I just couldn't.
     These kind of things kept me calm the night of my birthday.
     The next morning Christmas started out nice.  Dad liked his
copy of More"inA"inSo"inHave a lot, which made me so happy,
especially when he told his own story about that night we
watched it.  He left out the part about him crying, but he winked
at me, so I knew he remembered.  Even the two-hour drive to
Ohio was actually okay for the first half hour, even though I had
to sit on the hump in the backseat, because my dad kept asking
questions about college, and my brother kept talking.  He is
dating one of those cheerleader girls who does flips during college
football games.  Her name is Kelly.  My dad was very interested in
that.  My sister made some remark about how cheerleading is
stupid and sexist, and my brother told her to shut up. Kelly was
majoring in philosophy.  I asked my brother if Kelly was
unconventionally beautiful.
     "No, she's hot beautiful."
     And my sister started talking about how the way a woman
looks is not the most important thing.  I agreed, but then my
brother started saying how my sister was just a "bitchy dyke."
Then, my mom told my brother to not use such language in front
of me, which was strange considering I am probably the only one
in the family with a friend who is gay.  Maybe not, but one who
actually talks about it.  I'm not sure.  Regardless, my dad asked
how my brother and Kelly met.
     My brother and Kelly met at a restaurant called Ye Olde
College Inn or something like that at Penn State.  They
supposedly have this famous dessert called "grilled stickies."
Anyway, Kelly was with her sorority sisters, and they started to
leave, and she dropped her book right in front of my brother, and
she kept walking. My brother said that although Kelly denies this,
he's sure that she dropped the book on purpose.  The leaves were
in full bloom when he caught up with her in front of the video
arcade.  That's how he described it anyway.  They spent the rest
of the afternoon playing old video games like Donkey Kong and
feeling nostalgic, which as a general statement, I found sad and
sweet.  I asked my brother if Kelly drank cocoa.
     "Are you high?"
     And again my mom asked my brother not to use such language
in front of me, which was strange again because I think I'm the
only person in my family who's ever been high.  Maybe also my
brother.  I'm not sure.  Definitely not my sister.  Then again,
maybe my whole family has been high, and we just don't tell each
other these things.
     My sister spent the next ten minutes denouncing the Greek
system of sororities and fraternities. She kept telling stories of
"hazing" and how kids have died before.  She then told this one
story about how she heard there was a sorority that made the new
girls stand in their underwear while they circled their "fat" in red
magic markers.  My brother had had enough of my sister at that
point.
     "Bullshit!"
     I still can't believe that my brother swore in the car, and my
dad or mom didn't say anything.  I guess because he's in college
now, it's all right.  My sister didn't care about the word.  She just
kept going.
     "It's not bullshit.  I heard it."
     "Watch your mouth, young lady," my dad said from the front
seat.
     "Oh, yeah? Where did you hear it?" my brother asked.
     "I heard it on National Public Radio," my sister said.
     "Oh, Jesus." My brother has a very full laugh.
     "Well, I did."
     My mom and dad looked like they were watching a tennis
match through the windshield because they just kept shaking their
heads.  They didn't say anything.  They didn't look back.  I should
point out, though, that my dad slowly started turning the
Christmas music on the radio to a deafening volume.
     "You are so full of shit.  How would you know anything
anyway? You haven't been to college.  Kelly didn't go through
anything like that."
     "Oh, yeah ...  like she'd tell you."
     "Yeah ...  she would.  We don't keep secrets."
     "Oh, you're such a sensitive new age guy."
     I wanted them to stop fighting because I was starting to get
upset, so I asked another question.
     "Do you talk about books and issues?"
     "Thank you for asking, Charlie.  Yes.  As a matter of fact we
do.  Kelly's favorite book just happens to be Walden by Henry
David Thoreau.  And Kelly just happened to say that the
transcendental movement is a close parallel to this day and age."
     "Oooo.  Big words." My sister rolls her eyes better than
anyone.
     "Oh, I'm sorry.  Was anyone talking to you? I happen to be
telling my younger brother about my girlfriend.  Kelly says that
she hopes a good Democratic candidate will challenge George
Bush.  Kelly says that her hope is that the E.R.A.  might finally
pass if that happens.  That's right.  The E.R.A.  that you always
squawk about.  Even cheerleaders think about those things.  And
they can actually have fun in the meantime."
     My sister folded her arms in front of her and started whistling.
My brother was too much on a roll to stop, though.  I noticed that
my dad's neck was getting very red.
     "But there's another difference between you and her.  You see
...  Kelly believes in women's rights so much that she would never
let a guy hit her.  I guess I can't say that about you."
     I swear to God, we almost died.  My dad hit those brakes so
hard that my brother almost flew over the seat.  When the smell
from the tires started to fade, my dad took a deep breath and
turned around.  First, he turned to my brother.  He didn't say a
word.  He just stared.
     My brother looked at my dad like a deer caught by my cousins.
 After a long two seconds, my brother turned to my sister.  I think
he felt bad about it because of how the words came out.
     "I'm sorry.  Okay? I mean it.  Can'mon.  Stop crying."
     My sister was crying so hard, it was scary.  Then, my dad
turned to my sister.  Again, he didn't say a word.  He just snapped
his fingers to distract her from crying.  She looked at him.  She
was confused at first because he wasn't giving her a warm look.
But then, she looked down and shrugged and turned to my
brother.
     "I'm sorry I said what I said about Kelly.  She sounds nice."
     Then, my dad turned to my mom.  And my mom turned to us.
     "Your father and I don't want any more fighting.  Especially in
the family's house.  Understood?"
     My mom and dad make a real team sometimes.  It's amazing to
watch.  My brother and sister both nodded and looked down.
Then, my dad turned to me.
     "Charlie?"
from
     "Yes, sir?"
     It is important to say "sir" at these moments.  And if they ever
call you by your first-middle-last name, you better watch out.  I'm
telling you.
     "Charlie, I would like you to drive the rest of the way to my
mother's house."
     Everyone in the car knew that this was probably the worst
idea my dad ever had in his whole life.  But no one argued.  He
got out of the car in the middle of the road.  He got in the
backseat between my brother and sister.  I climbed in the front
seat, stalled the car twice, and put on my seat belt.  I drove the
rest of the way.  I haven't sweat that much since I played sports,
and it was cold out.
     My dad's family is kind of like my mom's family.  My brother
once said it was like the same cousins with different names.  The
big difference is my grandma.  I love my grandma.  Everyone
loves my grandma.  She was waiting for us in the driveway as she
always did.  She always knew when someone was coming.
     "Is Charlie driving now?"
     "He turned sixteen yesterday."
     "Oh."
     My grandma is very old, and she doesn't remember things a lot,
but she bakes the most delicious cookies. When I was very little,
we had my mom's mom, who always had candy, and my dad's
mom, who always had cookies. My mom told me that when I was
little, I called them "Candy Grandma" and "Cookies Grandma." I
also called pizza crust "pizza bones." I don't know why I'm telling
you this.
     It's like my very first memory, which I guess is the first time I
was aware that I was alive.  My mom and my Aunt Helen took
me to the zoo.  I think I was three.  I don't remember that part.
Anyway, we were watching these two cows.  A mother cow and
its baby calf.  And they didn't have a lot of room to walk around.
Anyway, the baby calf was standing right underneath its mother,
just kind of walking around, and the mother cow took a "dump"
on the baby calf's head.  I thought it was the funniest thing I had
ever seen in the whole world, and I laughed about it for three
hours.  At first, my mom and Aunt Helen kind of laughed, too,
because they were happy that I was laughing.  Supposedly, I
didn't talk hardly at all when I was a little kid, and whenever I
seemed normal, they were happy.  But into the third hour, they
were trying to make me stop laughing, but it only made me laugh
harder.  I don't think it was really three hours, but it seemed like a
long time.  I still think about it every now and then.  It seems like
a rather "auspicious" beginning.
     After hugs and handshakes, we went into my grandma's house,
and the whole dad-side-of-the-family was there.  Great Uncle Phil
with his fake teeth and my aunt Rebecca, who is my dad's sister.
Mom told us that Aunt Rebecca just got divorced again, so we
shouldn't mention anything.  All I could think about was the
cookies, but Grandma didn't make them this year because of her
bad hip.
     We all sat down and watched television instead, and my
cousins and my brother talked about football.  And my Great
Uncle Phil drank.  And we ate dinner.  And I had to sit at the little
kids' table because there are more cousins on my dad's side of the
family.
     Little kids talk about the strangest things.  They really do.
     After dinner is when we watched It's a Wonderful Life, and I
started feeling more and more sad.  As I was walking up the stairs
to my dad's old room, and I was looking at the old photographs, I
started thinking that there was a time when these weren't
memories.  That someone actually took that photograph, and the
people in the photograph had just eaten lunch or something.
     My grandma's first husband died in Korea.  My dad and my
aunt Rebecca were very young.  And my grandma moved with
her two kids to live with her brother, my great uncle Phil.
     Finally, after a few years, my grandma was feeling very sad
because she had these two little kids, and she was tired from
waitressing all the time.  So, one day, she was working at this
diner where she worked, and this truck driver asked her on a date.
 My grandma was very very pretty in that old photograph kind of
way.  They dated for a while.  And finally they got married.  He
turned out to be a terrible person.  He hit my dad all the time.
And he hit my aunt Rebecca all the time.  And he really hit my
grandma.  All the time.  And my grandma really couldn't do
anything about it, I guess, because it went on for seven years.
     It ended finally when my great uncle Phil saw bruises on my
aunt Rebecca and finally got the truth out of my grandma.  Then,
he got a few of his friends together from the factory.  And they
found my grandma's second husband in a bar.  And they beat him
up really bad.  My great uncle Phil loves to tell the story when my
grandma isn't around.  The story keeps changing, but the main
point is still the same.  The guy died four days later in the
hospital.
     I still don't know how my great uncle Phil missed going to jail
for doing what he did.  I asked my dad once, and he said that the
people that lived around his neighborhood understood that some
things had nothing to do with the police.  He said that if someone
touched your sister or your mother, they paid the price, and
everyone looked the other way.
     It's just too bad that it went on for seven years because my
aunt Rebecca went through the same kind of husbands. My aunt
Rebecca had it different, though, because neighborhoods change.
My great uncle Phil was too old, and my dad left his hometown.
She had to get restraining orders instead.
     I think about what my three cousins, who are Aunt Rebecca's
children, will turn out like.  One girl and two boys.  I get sad, too,
because I think that the one girl will probably end up like my aunt
Rebecca, and the one boy will probably end up like his dad.  The
other boy might end up like my dad because he can really play
sports, and he had a different dad than his brother or sister.  My
dad talks to him a lot and teaches him how to throw and hit a
baseball.  I used to get jealous about this when I was a little kid,
but I don't anymore.  Because my brother said that my cousin is
the only one in his family who has ad chance.  He needs my dad.
I guess I understand that now.
     My dad's old room is very much the way he left it, except more
faded.  There is a globe on a desk that has been spun a lot.  And
there are old posters of baseball players.  And old press clippings
of my dad winning the big game when he was a sophomore.  I
don't know why, but I really understood why my dad had to leave
this house.  When he knew my grandma would never find another
man because she was through trusting and would never look for
anything else because she didn't know how.  And when he saw
his sister start bringing home younger versions of their stepfather
to date.  He just couldn't stay.
     I laid down on his old bed, and I looked through the window
at this tree that was probably a lot shorter when my dad looked at
it.  And I could feel what he felt on the night when he realized
that if he didn't leave, it would never be his life.  It would be
theirs.  At least that's how he's put it.  Maybe that's why my dad's
side of the family watches the same movie every year.  It makes
sense enough.  I should probably mention that my dad never cries
at the ending.
     I don't know if my grandma or Aunt Rebecca will ever really
forgive my dad for leaving them.  Only my great uncle Phil
understood that part.  It's always strange to see how my dad
changes around his mom and sister.  He feels bad all the time, and
his sister and he always take a walk alone together.  One time, I
looked out the window, and I saw my dad giving her money.
     I wonder what my aunt Rebecca says in the car on the way
home.  I wonder what her children think.  I wonder if they talk
about us.  I wonder if they look at my family and wonder who has
a chance to make it.  I bet they do.
     Love always,
     Charlie
   
December 26, 1991
Dear friend,
     I am sitting in my bedroom now after the two-hour ride back
to my house.  My sister and brother were nice to each other, so I
didn't have to drive.
     Usually, on the way home, we drive to visit my Aunt Helen's
grave.  It's kind of a tradition.  My brother and my dad never want
to go that much, but they know not to say anything because of
Mom and me.  My sister is kind of neutral, but she is sensitive
about certain things.
     Every time we go to see my Aunt Helen's grave, my mom and
I like to talk about something really great about her. Most years it
is about how she let me stay up and watch Saturday Night Live.
And my mom smiles because she knows if she was a kid, she
would have wanted to stay up and watch, too.
     We both put down flowers and sometimes a card.  We just
want her to know that we miss her, and we think of her, and she
was special.  She didn't get that enough when she was alive, my
mom always says.  And like my dad, I think my mom feels guilty
about it.  So guilty that instead of giving her money, she gave her
a home to stay in.
     I want you to know why my mom is guilty.  I should probably
tell you why, but I really don't know if I should.  I have to talk
about it with someone.  No one in my family will ever talk about
it.  It's just something they don't.  I'm talking about the bad thing
that happened to Aunt Helen they wouldn't tell me about when I
was little.
     Every time it comes to Christmas it's all I can think about ...
deep down.  It is the one thing that makes me deep down sad.
     I will not say who.  I will not say when.  I will just say that my
aunt Helen was molested.  I hate that word.  It was done by
someone who was very close to her.  It was not her dad.  She
finally told her dad.  He didn't believe her because of who it was.
A friend of the family.  That just made it worse.  My grandma
never said anything either.  And the man kept coming over for
visits.
     My aunt Helen drank a lot.  My aunt Helen took drugs a lot.
My aunt Helen had many problems with men and boys.  She was
a very unhappy person most of her life.  She went to hospitals all
the time.  All kinds of hospitals.  Finally, she went to a hospital
that helped her figure things out enough to try and make things
normal, so she moved in with my family.  She started taking
classes to get a good job.  She told her last bad man to leave her
alone.  She started losing weight without going on a diet.  She
took care of us, so my parents could go out and drink and play
board games.  She let us stay up late.  She was the only person
other than my mom and dad and brother and sister to buy me two
presents.  One for my birthday.  One for Christmas.  Even when
she moved in with the family and had no money.  She always
bought me two presents.  They were always the best presents.
     On December 24, 1983, a policeman came to the door.  My
aunt Helen was in a terrible car accident.  It was very snowy.  The
policeman told my mom that my aunt Helen had passed away.  He
was a very nice man because when my mom started crying, he
said that it was a very bad accident, and my Aunt Helen was
definitely killed instantly.  In other words, there was no pain.
There was no pain anymore.
     The policeman asked my mom to come down and identify the
body.  My dad was still at work.  That was when I walked up
with my brother and sister.  It was my seventh birthday.  We all
wore party hats.  My mom made my sister and brother wear them.
My sister saw Mom crying and asked what was wrong.  My mom
couldn't say anything.  The policeman got on one knee and told us
what happened.  My brother and sister cried.  But I didn't.  I knew
that the policeman made a mistake.
     My mom asked my brother and sister to take care of me and
left with the policeman.  I think we watched TV.  I don't think I
really remember.  My dad came home before my mom.
     "Why the long faces?"
     We told him.  He did not cry.  He asked if we were okay.  My
brother and sister said no.  I said yes.  The policeman just made a
mistake.  It is very snowy.  He probably couldn't see.  My mom
came home.  She was crying.  She looked at my dad and nodded.
My dad held her.  That's when I figured out that the policeman
didn't make a mistake.
     I don't really know what happened next, and I never really
asked.  I just remember going to the hospital.  I remember sitting
in a room with bright lights.  I remember a doctor asking me
questions.  I remember telling him how Aunt Helen was the only
one who hugged me.  I remember seeing my family on Christmas
day in a waiting room.  I remember not being allowed to go to the
funeral.  I remember never saying good-bye to my Aunt Helen.
     I don't know how long I kept going to the doctor.  I don't
remember how long they kept me out of school.  It was a long
time.  I know that much.  All I remember is the day I started
getting better because I remembered the last thing my Aunt Helen
said just before she left to drive in the snow.
     She wrapped herself in a coat.  I handed her the car keys
because I was always the one who could find them.  I asked Aunt
Helen where she was going.  She told me that it was a secret.  I
kept bugging my aunt Helen, which she loved.  She loved the
way I would keep asking her questions.  She finally shook her
head, smiled, and whispered in my ear.
     "I'm going to buy your birthday present."
     That's the last time I ever saw her.  I like to think my aunt
Helen would now have that good job she was studying for.  I like
to think she would have met a good man.  I like to think she
would have lost the weight she always wanted to lose without
dieting.
     Despite everything my mom and doctor and dad have said to
me about blame, I can't stop thinking what I know. And I know
that my aunt Helen would still be alive today if she just bought
me one present like everybody else. She would be alive if I were
born on a day that didn't snow.  I would do anything to make this
go away.  I miss her terribly.  I have to stop writing now because I
am too sad.
     Love always,
     Charlie
   
December 30, 1991
Dear friend,
     The day after I wrote to you, I finished The Catcher in the Rye.
 I have read it three times since.  I really didn't know what else to
do.  Sam and Patrick are finally coming home tonight, but I won't
get to see them.  Patrick is going to meet Brad somewhere.  Sam
is going to meet Craig.  I'll see them both tomorrow at the Big
Boy and then at Bob's New Year's Eve party.
     The exciting part is that I'm going to drive to the Big Boy by
myself.  My dad said I couldn't drive until the weather cleared up,
and it finally did a little bit yesterday.  I made a mix tape for the
occasion.  It is called "The First Time I Drove." Maybe I'm being
too sentimental, but I like to think that when I'm old, I will be
able to look at all these tapes and remember those drives.
     The first time I drove alone was to see my aunt Helen.  It was
the first time I ever went to see her without at least my mom.  I
made it a special time.  I bought flowers with my Christmas
money.  I even made her a mix tape and left it at the grave.  I
hope you do not think that makes me weird.
     I told my aunt Helen all about my life.  About Sam and
Patrick.  About their friends.  About my first New Year's Eve
party tomorrow.  I told her about how my brother would be
playing his last football game of the season on New Year's Day.  I
told her about my brother leaving and how my mom cried.  I told
her about the books I read.  I told her about the song "Asleep." I
told her when we all felt infinite.  I told her about me getting my
driver's license.  How my mom drove us there.  And how I drove
us back.  And how the policeman who ran the test didn't even
look weird or have a funny name, which felt like a gyp to me.
     I remember when I was just about to say good-bye to my aunt
Helen, I started crying.  It was a real kind of crying, too.  Not the
panicky type, which I do a lot.  And I made Aunt Helen a promise
to only cry about important things because I would hate to think
that crying as much as I do would make crying for Aunt Helen
less than it is.
     Then, I said good-bye, and I drove home.
     I read the book again that night because I knew that if I didn't,
I would probably start crying again.  The panicky type, I mean.  I
read until I was completely exhausted and had to go to sleep.  In
the morning, I finished the book and then started immediately
reading it again.  Anything to not feel like crying.  Because I
made the promise to Aunt Helen.  And because I don't want to
start thinking again.  Not like I have this last week.  I can't think
again.  Not ever again.
     I don't know if you've ever felt like that.  That you wanted to
sleep for a thousand years.  Or just not exist.  Or just not be
aware that you do exist.  Or something like that.  I think wanting
that is very morbid, but I want it when I get like this.  That's why
I'm trying not to think.  I just want it all to stop spinning.  If this
gets any worse, I might have to go back to the doctor.  It's getting
that bad again.
     Love always,
     Charlie
   
January 1, 1992
Dear friend,
     It's now 4 o'clock in the morning, which is the new year even
though it's still December 31, that is, until people sleep.  I can't
sleep.  Everyone else is either asleep or having sex.  I've been
watching cable television and eating jello.  And seeing things
move.  I wanted to tell you about Sam and Patrick and Craig and
Brad and Bob and everyone, but I can't remember right now.
     It's peaceful outside.  I do know that.  And I drove to the Big
Boy earlier.  And I saw Sam and Patrick.  And they were with
Brad and Craig.  And it made me very sad because I wanted to be
alone with them.  This has never come up before.
     Things were worse an hour ago, and I was looking at this tree
but it was a dragon and then a tree, and I remembered that one
nice pretty weather day when I was part of the air.  And I
remembered that I mowed the lawn that day for my allowance
just like I shovel the driveway for my allowance now.  So I
started shoveling Bob's driveway, which is a strange thing to do
at a New Year's Eve party really.
     My cheeks were red cold just like Mr.  Z's drinking face and
his black shoes and his voice saying when a caterpillar goes into a
cocoon, it goes through torture and how it takes seven years to
digest gum.  And this one kid Mark at the party who gave me this
came out of nowhere and looked at the sky and told me to see the
stars.  So, I looked up, and we were in this giant dome like a glass
snowball, and Mark said that the amazing white stars were really
only holes in the black glass of the dome, and when you went to
heaven, the glass broke away, and there was nothing but a whole
sheet of star white, which is brighter than anything but doesn't
hurt your eyes. It was vast and open and thinly quiet, and I felt so
small.
     Sometimes, I look outside, and I think that a lot of other
people have seen this snow before.  Just like I think that a lot of
other people have read those books before.  And listened to those
songs.
     I wonder how they feel tonight.
     I don't really know what I'm saying.  I probably shouldn't write
this down because I'm still seeing things move.  I want them to
stop moving, but they're not supposed to for another few hours.
That's what Bob said before he went to his bedroom with Jill, a
girl that I don't know.
     I guess what I'm saying is that this all feels very familiar.  But
it's not mine to be familiar about.  I just know that another kid
has felt this.  This one time when it's peaceful outside, and you're
seeing things move, and you don't want to, and everyone is
asleep.  And all the books you've read have been read by other
people.  And all the songs you've loved have been heard by other
people.  And that girl that's pretty to you is pretty to other people.
 And you know that if you looked at these facts when you were
happy, you would feel great because you are describing "unity."
     It's like when you are excited about a girl and you see a couple
holding hands, and you feel so happy for them. And other times
you see the same couple, and they make you so mad.  And all you
want is to always feel happy for them because you know that if
you do, then it means that you're happy, too.
     I just remembered what made me think of all this.  I'm going to
write it down because maybe if I do I won't have to think about
it.  And I won't get upset.  But the thing is that I can hear Sam
and Craig having sex, and for the first time in my life, I
understand the end of that poem.
     And I never wanted to.  You have to believe me.
     Love always,
     Charlie
   
Part 3
   
January 4, 1992
Dear friend,
     I'm sorry for that last letter.  To tell you the truth, I don't really
remember much of it, but I know from how I woke up that it
probably wasn't very nice.  All I remember from the rest of that
night was looking all over the house for an envelope and a stamp.
When I finally found them, I wrote your address and walked
down the hill past the trees to the post office because I knew that
if I didn't put it in a mailbox that I couldn't get it back from, I
would never mail the letter.
     It's weird how important it seemed at the time.
     Once I got to the post office, I dropped the letter into the
mailbox.  And it felt final.  And calm.  Then, I started throwing
up, and I didn't stop throwing up until the sun came up.  I looked
at the road and saw a lot of cars, and I knew they were all going
to their grandparents' house. And I knew a lot of them would
watch my brother play football later that day.  And my mind
played hopscotch.
     My brother ...  football ...  Brad ...  Dave and his girlfriend in
my room ...  the coats ...  the cold ...  the winter ...  "Autumn
Leaves" ...  don't tell anyone ...  you pervert ...  Sam and Craig ...
Sam ...  Christmas ...  typewriter ...  gift ...  Aunt Helen ...  and
the trees kept moving ...  they just wouldn't stop moving ...  so I
laid down and made a snow angel.
     The policemen found me pale blue and asleep.
     I didn't stop shivering from the cold until a long time after my
mom and dad drove me home from the emergency room.  Nobody
got in trouble because these things used to happen to me when I
was a kid when I was seeing the doctors. I would just wander off
and fall asleep somewhere.  Everyone knew I went to a party, but
nobody, not even my sister, thought it was because of that.  And I
kept my mouth shut because I didn't want Sam or Patrick or Bob
or anyone to get in trouble.  But most of all, I didn't want to see
my mother's face and especially my father's if they heard me say
the truth.
     So, I didn't say anything.
     I just kept quiet and looked around.  And I noticed things.
The dots on the ceiling.  Or how the blanket they gave me was
rough.  Or how the doctor's face looked rubbery.  Or how
everything was a deafening whisper, when he said that maybe I
should start seeing a psychiatrist again.  It was the first time a
doctor ever told that to my parents with me in the room.  And his
coat was so white.  And I was so tired.
     All I could think through the whole day was that we missed
my brother's football game because of me, and I really hoped my
sister thought to tape it.
     Luckily, she did.
     We got home, and my mom made me some tea, and my dad
asked me if I wanted to sit and watch the game, and I said yes.
We watched my brother make a great play, but this time, nobody
really cheered.  All corners of all eyes were on me.  And my mom
said a lot of encouraging things about how I was doing so well
this school year and maybe the doctor would help me sort things
out.  My mom can be quiet and talk at the same time when she's
being positive.  My dad kept giving me "love pats." Love pats are
soft punches of encouragement that are administered on the knee,
shoulder, and arm.  My sister said that she could help me fix up
my hair.  It was weird to have them pay so much attention to me.
     "What do you mean? What's wrong with my hair?"
     My sister just kind of looked around, uncomfortable.  I reached
my hands up to my hair and realized that a lot of it was gone.  I
honestly don't remember when I did it, but from the look of my
hair, I must have grabbed a pair of scissors and just started cutting
without strategy.  Big chunks of it were missing all over the
place.  It was like a butcher's cut.  I hadn't looked at myself in the
mirror at the party for a long time because my face was different
and frightened me. Or else I would have noticed.
     My sister did help me trim it up a bit, and I was lucky because
everyone in school including Sam and Patrick thought it looked
cool.
     "Chic" was Patrick's word.
     Regardless, I decided to never take LSD again.
     Love always,
     Charlie
   
January 14, 1992
Dear friend,
     I feel like a big faker because I've been putting my life back
together, and nobody knows.  It's hard to sit in my bedroom and
read like I always did.  It's even hard to talk to my brother on the
phone.  His team finished third in the nation.  Nobody told him
we missed the game live because of me.
     I went to the library and checked out a book because I was
getting scared.  Every now and then things would start moving
again, and sounds were bass heavy and hollow.  And I couldn't
put a thought together.  The book said that sometimes people
take LSD, and they don't really get out of it.  They said that it
increases this one type of brain transmitter.  They said that
essentially the drug is twelve hours of schizophrenia, and if you
already have a lot of this brain transmitter, you don't get out of it.
     I started breathing fast in the library.  It was really bad because
I remembered some of the schizophrenic kids in the hospital when
I was little.  And it didn't help that this was the day after I noticed
that all the kids were wearing their new Christmas clothes, so I
decided to wear my new suit from Patrick to school, and was
teased mercilessly for nine straight hours. It was such a bad day.  I
skipped my first class ever and went to see Sam and Patrick
outside.
     "Looking sharp, Charlie," Patrick said grinning.
     "Can I have a cigarette?" I said.  I couldn't bring myself to say
"bum a smoke." Not for my first one.  I just couldn't.
     "Sure," said Patrick.
     Sam stopped him.
     "What's wrong, Charlie?"
     I told them what was wrong, which prompted Patrick to keep
asking me if I had a "bad trip."
     "No.  No.  It's not that." I was really getting upset.
     Sam put her arm around my shoulder, and she said she knew
what I was going through.  She told me I shouldn't worry about
it.  Once you do it, you remember how things looked on it.  That's
all.  Like how the road turned into waves.  And how your face
was plastic and your eyes were two different sizes.  It's all in your
mind.
     That's when she gave me the cigarette.
     When I lit it, I didn't cough.  It actually felt soothing.  I know
that's bad in a health class way, but it was true.
     "Now, focus on the smoke," Sam said.
     And I focused on the smoke.
     "Now, that looks normal doesn't it?"
     "Uh-huh," I think I said.
     "Now, look at the cement on the playground.  Is it moving?"
     "Uh-huh."
     "Okay ...  now focus on the piece of paper that's just sitting
there on the ground."
     And I focused on the piece of paper that was sitting on the
ground.
     "Is the cement moving now?"
     "No.  It's not."
     From there you go, to you're going to be okay, to you probably
should never do acid again, Sam went on to explain what she
called "the trance." The trance happens when you don't focus on
anything, and the whole big picture swallows and moves around
you.  She said it was usually metaphoric, but for people who
should never do acid again, it was literal.
     That's when I started laughing.  I was so relieved.  And Sam
and Patrick smiled.  I was glad they started smiling, too, because I
couldn't stand their looking so worried.
     Things have stopped moving for the most part ever since.  I
haven't skipped another class.  And I guess now I don't feel like a
big faker for trying to put my life back together.  Bill thought my
paper on The Catcher in the Rye (which I wrote on my new old
typewriter!) was my best one yet.  He said I was "developing" at a
rapid pace and gave me a different kind of book as "a reward." It's
On the Road by Jack Kerouac.
     I'm now up to about ten cigarettes a day.
     Love always,
     Charlie
   
January 25, 1992
Dear friend,
     I feel great! I really mean it.  I have to remember this for the
next time I'm having a terrible week.  Have you ever done that?
You feel really bad, and then it goes away, and you don't know
why.  I try to remind myself when I feel great like this that there
will be another terrible week coming someday, so I should store
up as many great details as I can, so during the next terrible week,
I can remember those details and believe that I'll feel great again.
It doesn't work a lot, but I think it's very important to try.
     My psychiatrist is a very nice man.  He's much better than my
last psychiatrist.  We talk about things that I feel and think and
remember.  Like when I was little, and there was this one time
that I walked down the street in my neighborhood.  I was
completely naked, holding a bright blue umbrella, even though it
wasn't raining.  And I was so happy because it made my mom
smile.  And she rarely smiled.  So, she took a picture.  And the
neighbors complained.
     This other time, I saw a commercial for this movie about a
man who was accused of murder, but he didn't commit the
murder.  A guy from More"inA"inSo"inHave was the star of the
movie.  That's probably why I remember it.  The commercial said
that the whole movie was about him trying to prove that he was
innocent and how he could go to jail anyway.  That scared me a
lot.  It scared me how much it scared me.  Being punished for
something you did not do.  Or being an innocent victim.  It's just
something that I never want to experience.
     I don't know if it is important to tell you all this, but at the
time, it felt like a "breakthrough."
     The best thing about my psychiatrist is that he has music
magazines in his waiting room.  I read an article about Nirvana on
one visit, and it didn't have any references to honey mustard
dressing or lettuce.  They kept talking about the singer's stomach
problems all the time, though.  It was weird.
     Like I told you, Sam and Patrick love their big song, so I
thought I'd read it to have something to discuss with them.  In the
end, the magazine compared him with John Lennon from the
Beatles.  I told that to Sam later, and she got really mad.  She said
he was like Jim Morrison if he was like anybody, but really, he
isn't like anybody but himself. We were all at the Big Boy after
Rocky Horror, and it started this big discussion.
     Craig said the problem with things is that everyone is always
comparing everyone with everyone and because of that, it
discredits people, like in his photography classes.
     Bob said that it was all about our parents not wanting to let go
of their youth and how it kills them when they can't relate to
something.
     Patrick said that the problem was that since everything has
happened already, it makes it hard to break new ground. Nobody
can be as big as the Beatles because the Beatles already gave it a
"context." The reason they were so big is that they had no one to
compare themselves with, so the sky was the limit.
     Sam added that nowadays a band or someone would compare
themselves to the Beatles after the second album, and their own
personal voice would be less from that moment on.
     "What do you think, Charlie?"
     I couldn't remember where I heard it or read it.  I said maybe it
was in This Side of Paradise by Scott Fitzgerald.  There's a place
near the end of the book where the main kid is picked up by some
older gentleman.  They are both going to an Ivy League
homecoming football game, and they have this debate.  The older
gentleman is established.  The kid is "jaded."
     Anyway, they have this discussion, and the kid is an idealist in
a temporary way.  He talks about his "restless generation" and
things like that.  And he says something like, "This is not a time
for heroes because nobody will let that happen." The book takes
place in the 1920's, which I thought was great because I supposed
the same kind of conversation could happen in the Big Boy.  It
probably already did with our parents and grandparents.  It was
probably happening with us right now.
     So, I said I thought the magazine was trying to make him a
hero, but then later somebody might dig up something to make
him seem like less than a person.  And I didn't know why because
to me he is just a guy who writes songs that a lot of people like,
and I thought that was enough for everyone involved.  Maybe I'm
wrong, but everyone at the table starting talking about it.
     Sam blamed television.  Patrick blamed government.  Craig
blamed the "corporate media." Bob was in the bathroom.
     I don't know what it was, and I know we didn't really
accomplish anything, but it felt great to sit there and talk about
our place in things.  It was like when Bill told me to "participate."
I went to the homecoming dance like I told you before, but this
was much more fun.  It was especially fun to think that people all
over the world were having similar conversations in their
equivalent of the Big Boy.
     I would have told the table that, but they were really having
fun being cynical, and I didn't want to ruin it.  So, I just sat back a
little bit and watched Sam sitting next to Craig and tried not to be
too sad about it.  I have to say that I couldn't do it very
successfully.  But at one point, Craig was talking about
something, and Sam turned to me and smiled.  It was a movie
smile in slow motion, and then everything was okay.
     I told this to my psychiatrist, but he said it was too soon to
draw any conclusions.
     I don't know.  I just had a great day.  I hope you did, too.
     Love always,
     Charlie
   
February 2, 1992
Dear friend,
     On the Road was a very good book.  Bill didn't ask me to
write a paper about it because, like I said, it was "a reward." He
did ask me to visit him in his office after school to discuss it,
which I did.  He made tea, and I felt like a grown-up.  He even let
me smoke a cigarette in his office, but he urged me to quit
smoking because of the health risks.  He even had a pamphlet in
his desk that he gave me.  I now use it as a bookmark.
     I thought Bill and I were going to talk about the book, but we
ended up talking about "things." It was great to have so many
discussions back-to-back.  Bill asked me about Sam and Patrick
and my parents, and I told him about getting my license and
talking in the Big Boy.  I also told him about my psychiatrist.  I
didn't tell him about the party or my sister and her boyfriend,
though.  They're still seeing each other in secret, which my sister
says only "adds to their passion."
     After I got through telling Bill about my life, I asked him
about his.  It was nice, too, because he didn't try to be cool and
relate to me or anything.  He was just himself about it.  He said
that he studied undergraduate work at some college in the West
that doesn't give grades, which I thought was peculiar, but Bill
said it was the best education he ever got.  He said he'd give me a
brochure when the time was right.
     After he went to Brown University for graduate school, Bill
traveled around Europe for a while, and when he came home, he
joined Teach for America.  When this year is over, he thinks he is
going to move to New York and write plays.  I guess he's still
pretty young, although I thought it would be rude to ask him.  I
did ask him if he had a girlfr, though, and he said he didn't.  He
seemed sad when he said it, too, but I decided not to pry because
I thought that would be too personal.  Then, he gave me my next
book to read.  It's called Naked Lunch.
     I started reading it when I got home, and to tell you the truth, I
don't know what the guy is talking about. I would never tell Bill
this.  Sam told me that William So.  Burroughs wrote the book
when he was on heroin and that I should "go with the flow." So, I
did.  I still had no idea what he was talking about, so I went
downstairs to watch television with my sister.
     The show was Gomer Pyle, and my sister was very quiet and
moody.  I tried to talk to her, but she just told me to shut up and
leave her alone.  So, I watched the show for a few minutes, but it
made even less sense to me than the book, so I decided to do my
math homework, which was a mistake because math has never
made any sense to me.
     I was just confused all day.
     So, I tried to help my mother in the kitchen, but I dropped the
casserole, so she told me to read in my room until my father came
home, but reading is what started this whole mess in the first
place.  Luckily, my father came home before I could pick up the
book again, but he told me to stop "hanging on his shoulders like
a monkey" because he wanted to watch the hockey game.  I
watched the hockey game with him for a while, but I couldn't
stop asking him questions about which countries the players are
from, and he was "resting his eyes," which means he was sleeping
but didn't want me to change the channel.  So, he told me to go
watch television with my sister, which I did, but she told me to
go help my mother in the kitchen, which I did, but then she told
me to go read in my room.  Which I did.
     I've read about a third of the book now, and it's pretty good so
far.
     Love always,
     Charlie
   
February 8, 1992
Dear friend,
     I have a date for the Sadie Hawkins' dance.  In case you didn't
have one of those, it's the dance where the girl asks the boy.  In
my case, the girl is Mary Elizabeth, and the boy is me.  Can you
believe it?!
     I think it started when I was helping Mary Elizabeth staple the
latest issue of Punk Rocky on Friday before we went to The
Rocky Horror Picture Show.  Mary Elizabeth was so nice that
day.  She said that it was the best issue we'd ever had for two
reasons, and both of those reasons were mine.
     First of all, it was in color, and second, it had the poem that I
gave Patrick in it.
     It really was a great issue.  I think I'll even think so when I'm
older.  Craig included some of his color photographs.  Sam
included some "underground" news on some bands.  Mary
Elizabeth wrote an article about the Democratic candidates.  Bob
included a reprint of a pro-hemp pamphlet.  And Patrick made
this fake coupon advertising a free "blow job" for anyone who
buys a Smiley Cookie at the Big Boy.  Some restrictions apply!
     There was even a nude photograph (from the back) of Patrick
if you can believe it.  Sam had Craig take the picture.  Mary
Elizabeth told everyone to keep it a secret that the photograph
was Patrick, which everybody did, except Patrick.
     All night, he kept yelling, "Flaunt it, baby! Flaunt it!" which is
his favorite line from his favorite movie, The Producers.
     Mary Elizabeth told me she thought that Patrick asked her to
put the photograph in the issue so Brad could have a photograph
of him without it being suspicious, but he wouldn't say for sure.
Brad bought a copy without even looking at it, so maybe she was
right.
     When I went to The Rocky Horror Picture Show that night,
Mary Elizabeth was really mad because Craig didn't show up.
Nobody knew why.  Not even Sam.  The problem was nobody
was there to play Rocky, the muscular robot (I'm not quite sure
what he is).  After looking around at everybody, Mary Elizabeth
turned to me.
     "Charlie, how many times have you seen the show?"
     "Ten."
     "Do you think you can play Rocky?"
     "I'm not cut and hunky."
     "It doesn't matter.  Can you play him?"
     "I guess."
     "Do you guess or do you know?"
     "I guess."
     "Good enough."
     The next thing I know, I was wearing nothing but slippers and
a bathing suit, which somebody painted gold.  I don't know how
these things happen to me sometimes.  I was very nervous,
especially because in the show, Rocky has to touch Janet all over
her body, and Sam was playing Janet.  Patrick kept making jokes
that I would get an "erection." I really hoped this wouldn't
happen.  Once, I got an erection in class and had to go to the
blackboard.  It was a terrible time.  And when my mind took that
experience and added a spotlight and the fact that I was only
wearing a bathing suit, I panicked.  I almost didn't do the show,
but then Sam told me she really wanted me to play Rocky, and I
guess that's all I really needed to hear.
     I won't go into detail about the whole show, but I had the best
time I ever had in my whole life.  I'm not kidding.  I got to
pretend that I was singing, and I got to dance around, and I got to
wear a "feather boa" in the grande finale, which I wouldn't have
thought anything of because it's part of the show, but Patrick
couldn't stop talking about it.
     "Charlie in a feather boa! Charlie in a feather boa!" He just
couldn't stop laughing.
     But the best part was the scene with Janet where we had to
touch each other.  It wasn't the best part because I got to touch
Sam and have her touch me.  It's the exact opposite.  I know that
sounds dumb, but it's true.  Just before the scene, I thought about
Sam, and I thought that if I touched her in that way on stage and
meant it, it would be cheap.  And as much as I think I might want
to someday touch her like that, I never want it to be cheap.  I
don't want it to be Rocky and Janet.  I want it to be Sam and I.
And I want her to mean it back.  So, we just played.
     When the show was over, we all bowed together, and there
was applause everywhere.  Patrick even shoved me in front of the
rest of the cast to take my own personal bow.  I think this is the
initiation for new cast members.  All I could think was how nice
it was that everyone applauded for me and how glad I was that
nobody in my family was there to see me play Rocky in a feather
boa.  Especially my dad.
     I did get an erection, though, but not until later, in the parking
lot of the Big Boy.
     That's when Mary Elizabeth asked me to the Sadie Hawkins'
dance after she said, "You looked really good in your costume."
     I like girls.  I really do.  Because they can think you look good
in a bathing suit even when you don't.  The erection made me feel
guilty in hindsight though, but I guess it couldn't be helped.
     I told my sister about having a date for the dance, but she was
really distracted.  Then, I tried to ask her advice about how to
treat a girl on a date since I've never had a date before, but she
wouldn't answer.  She wasn't being mean.  She was just "staring
off into space." I asked her if she was okay, and she said that she
needed to be alone, so I went up and finished Naked Lunch.
     After I finished, I just laid around in my bed, looking at the
ceiling, and I smiled because it was a nice kind of quiet.
     Love always,
     Charlie
   
February 9, 1992
Dear friend,
     I have to say something about my last letter.  I know that Sam
would never ask me to the dance.  I know that she would bring
Craig, and if not Craig, then Patrick since Brad's girlfr, Nancy, is
going with Brad.  I think Mary Elizabeth is a really smart and
pretty person, and I'm glad that she is my first date ever.  But
after I said yes, and Mary Elizabeth announced it to the group, I
wanted Sam to be jealous.  I know it's wrong to want something
like that, but I really did.
     Sam wasn't jealous, though.  To tell you the truth, I don't think
she could have been happier about it, which was hard.
     She even told me how to treat a girl on a date, which was very
interesting.  She said that with a girl like Mary Elizabeth, you
shouldn't tell her she looks pretty.  You should tell her how nice
her outfit is because her outfit is her choice whereas her face isn't.
She also said that with some girls, you should do things like open
car doors and buy flowers, but with Mary Elizabeth (especially
since it's the Sadie Hawkins' dance), I shouldn't do that.  So, I
asked her what I should do, and she said that I should ask a lot of
questions and not mind when Mary Elizabeth doesn't stop talking.
 I said that it didn't sound very democratic, but Sam said she does
it all the time with boys.
     Sam did say that sex things were tricky with Mary Elizabeth
since she's had boyfriends before and is a lot more experienced
than I am.  She said that the best thing to do when you don't
know what to do during anything sexual is pay attention to how
that person is kissing you and kiss them back the same way.  She
says that is very sensitive, which I certainly want to be.
     So, I said, "Can you show me?"
     And she said, "Don't be smart."
     We talk to each other like that every now and then.  It always
makes her laugh.  After Sam showed me a Zippo lighter trick, I
asked her more about Mary Elizabeth.
     "What if I don't want to do anything sexual with her?"
     "Just say you're not ready."
     "Does that work?"
     "Sometimes."
     I wanted to ask Sam about the other side of "sometimes," but I
didn't want to be too personal, and I didn't want to know deep
down.  I wish I could stop being in love with Sam.  I really do.
     Love always,
     Charlie
   
February 15, 1992
Dear friend,
     I don't feel very well because everything is messy.  I did go to
the dance, and I did tell Mary Elizabeth how nice her outfit was.
I did ask her questions, and I let her talk the whole time.  I
learned a lot about "objectification," Native Americans, and the
bourgeoisie.
     But most of all, I learned about Mary Elizabeth.
     Mary Elizabeth wants to go to Berkeley and get two degrees.
One is for political science.  The other is for sociology with a
minor concentration in women's studies.  Mary Elizabeth hates
high school and wants to explore lesbian relationships.  I asked
her if she thought girls were pretty, and she looked at me like I
was stupid and said, "That's not the point."
     Mary Elizabeth's favorite movie is Reds.  Her favorite book is
an autobiography of a woman who was a character in Reds.  I
can't remember her name.  Mary Elizabeth's favorite color is
green.  Her favorite season is spring.  Her favorite ice cream
flavor (she said she refuses to eat low-fat frozen yogurt on
principle alone) is Cherry Garcia.  Her favorite food is pizza (half
mushrooms, half green peppers).  Mary Elizabeth is a vegetarian,
and she hates her parents.  She is also fluent in Spanish.
     The only thing she asked me the whole time was whether or
not I wanted to kiss her good night.  When I said that I wasn't
ready, she said she understood and told me what a great time she
had.  She said I was the most sensitive boy she'd ever met, which
I didn't understand because really all I did was not interrupt her.
     Then, she asked me if I wanted to go out again sometime,
which Sam and I hadn't discussed, so I wasn't prepared to answer
it.  I said yes because I didn't want to do anything wrong, but I
don't think I can think of a whole other night's worth of
questions.  I don't know what to do.  How many dates can you go
on and still not be ready to kiss? I don't think I will ever be ready
for Mary Elizabeth.  I'll have to ask Sam about this.
     Incidentally, Sam took Patrick to the dance after Craig said he
was too busy.  I guess they had a big fight about it.  Finally, Craig
said that he didn't want to go to some stupid high school dance
since he had already graduated. At one point in the dance, Patrick
went to the parking lot to get stoned with his guidance counselor,
and Mary Elizabeth was requesting that the deejay play some girl
bands, which left Sam and me alone.
     "Are you having a good time?"
     Sam didn't answer right away.  She just kind of looked sad.
     "Not really.  Are you?"
     "I don't know.  This is my first date, so I don't know what to
compare it to."
     "Don't worry.  You'll do fine."
     "Really?"
     "You want some punch?"
     "Sure."
     With that, Sam left.  She really did look sad, and I wished I
could have made her feel better, but sometimes, I guess you just
can't.  So, I stood alone by the wall and watched the dance for a
while.  I would describe it to you, but I think it's the kind of thing
where you have to be there or at least know the people.  But then
again, maybe you knew the same people when you went to your
high school dances, if you know what I mean.
     The one different thing about this particular dance was my
sister.  She was with her boyfriend.  And during a slow song, it
looked like they had a huge fight because he stopped looking at
her, and she rushed off the dance floor to where the bathrooms
are.  I tried to follow her, but she had too much of a head start.
She never came back to the dance, and her boyfriend eventually
left.
     After Mary Elizabeth dropped me off, I went into the house
and found my sister crying in the basement.  This was a different
kind of crying.  It kind of frightened me.  I talked very quiet and
slow.
     "Are you okay?"
     "Leave me alone, Charlie."
     "No, really.  What's wrong?"
     "You wouldn't understand."
     "I could try."
     "That's a laugh.  That's really a laugh."
     "Do you want me to wake up Mom and Dad then?"
     "No."
     "Well, maybe they could--"
     "CHARLIE! SHUT UP! OKAY?! JUST SHUT UP!"
     That's when she really started crying.  I didn't want to make
her feel worse, so I turned to leave her alone.  That's when my
sister started hugging me.  She didn't say anything.  She just
hugged me tight and wouldn't let go.  So, I hugged her back.  It
was weird, too, because I've never hugged my sister.  Not when
she wasn't forced to anyway.  After a while, she calmed down a
bit and let go.  She took a deep breath and brushed off the hair
that was sticking to her face.
     That's when she told me she was pregnant.
     I would tell you about the rest of the night, but I honestly
don't remember much about it.  It's all a very sad daze.  I do know
that her boyfriend said it wasn't his baby, but my sister knew that
it was.  And I do know that he broke up with her right there at
the dance.  My sister hasn't told anybody else about it because she
doesn't want it to get around.  The only people who know are me,
her, and him.  I'm not allowed to tell anyone we know.  Not
anyone.  Not ever.
     I told my sister that after a while, she probably couldn't hide it,
but she said she wouldn't let it go that far.  Since she was
eighteen, she didn't need Mom or Dad's permission.  All she
needed was someone to be with her next Saturday at the clinic.
And that person was me.
     "It's lucky I got my license now."
     I said that to make her laugh.  But she didn't.
     Love always,
     Charlie
   
February 23, 1992
Dear friend,
     I was sitting in the waiting room of the clinic.  I had been there
for an hour or so.  I don't remember exactly how long.  Bill had
given me a new book to read, but I just couldn't concentrate on it.
 I guess it makes sense why not.
     Then, I tried to read some magazines, but again, I just
couldn't.  It wasn't so much that they mentioned what the people
were eating.  It was all the magazine covers.  Each one had a
smiling face, and every time it was a woman on the cover, she
was showing her cleavage.  I wondered if those women wanted
to do that to look pretty or if it was just part of the job.  I
wondered if they had a choice or not if they wanted to be
successful.  I just couldn't get that thought out of my mind.
     I could almost see the photo shoot and the actress or model
going to eat a "light lunch" with her boyfriend afterward.  I could
see him asking her about her day, and how she wouldn't think too
much of it, or maybe if it was her first magazine cover, how she
would be very excited because she was starting to become
famous.  I could see the magazine on the newsstands, and a lot of
anonymous eyes looking at it, and how some people would think
it was very important.  And then how a girl like Mary Elizabeth
would be very angry about the actress or model showing her
cleavage along with all the other actresses and models doing the
same thing, while some photographer like Craig would just look
at the quality of the photograph.  Then, I thought there would be
some men who would buy the magazine and masturbate to it.
And I wondered what the actress or her boyfriend thought about
that, if they did at all.  And then I thought that it was about time
for me to stop thinking because it wasn't doing my sister any
good.
     That's when I started thinking about my sister.
     I thought about the time when she and her friends painted my
fingernails, and how that was okay because my brother wasn't
there.  And the time she let me use her dolls to make up plays or
let me watch whatever I wanted to watch on TV.  And when she
started becoming a "young lady," and no one was allowed to look
at her because she thought she was fat. And how she really wasn't
fat.  And how she was actually very pretty.  And how different
her face looked when she realized boys thought she was pretty.
And how different her face looked the first time she really liked a
boy who was not on a poster on her wall. And how her face
looked when she realized she was in love with that boy.  And
then I wondered how her face would look when she came out
from behind those doors.
     My sister was the one who told me where babies come from.
My sister was also the one who laughed when I immediately
asked her where babies go to.
     When I thought that, I started to cry.  But I couldn't let anyone
see me because if they did, they might not let me drive her home,
and they might call our parents.  And I couldn't let that happen
because my sister was counting on me, and this was the first time
anyone ever counted on me for anything.  When I realized that
this was the first time I cried since I made my aunt Helen the
promise not to cry unless it was for something important, I had to
go outside because I couldn't hide it from anyone anymore.
     I must have been in the car for a long time because eventually
my sister found me there.  I was chain-smoking cigarettes and
crying still.  My sister knocked on the window.  I rolled it down.
She looked at me with this curious expression.  Then, her
curiosity turned to anger.
     "Charlie, are you smoking?!"
     She was so mad.  I can't tell you how mad she was.
     "I can't believe you're smoking!"
     That's when I stopped crying.  And started laughing.  Because
of all the things she could have said right after she got out of
there, she picked my smoking.  And she got angry about it.  And I
knew if my sister was angry, then her face wouldn't be that
different.  And she would be okay.
     "I'm going to tell Mom and Dad, you know?"
     "No, you're not." God, I couldn't stop laughing.
     When my sister thought about it for a second, I think she
figured out why she wouldn't tell Mom or Dad. It's like she
suddenly remembered where we were and what had just
happened and how crazy our whole conversation was considering
all that.  Then, she started laughing.
     But the laughing made her feel sick, so I had to get out of the
car and help her into the backseat.  I had already set up the pillow
and blanket for her because we figured it was probably best for
her to sleep it off a little in the car before we went home.
     Just before she fell asleep, she said, "Well, if you're going to
smoke, crack the window at least."
     Which made me start laughing again.
     "Charlie, smoking.  I can't believe it."
     Which made me laugh harder, and I said, "I love you."
     And my sister said, "I love you, too.  Just stop it with the
laughing already."
     Eventually, my laughing turned into the occasional chuckle,
and then it just stopped.  I looked back and saw that my sister
was asleep.  So, I started the car and turned on the heater, so she
would be warm.  That's when I started reading the book Bill gave
me.  It's Walden by Henry David Thoreau, which is my brother's
girlfr's favorite book, so I was very excited to read it.
     When the sun went down, I put my smoking pamphlet on the
page where I stopped reading and started driving home.  I
stopped a few blocks from our house to wake up my sister and
put the blanket and pillow in the trunk. We pulled into the
driveway.  We got out.  We went inside.  And we heard our
mother and father's voices from the top of the stairs.
     "Where have you two been all day?"
     "Yeah.  Dinner's almost ready."
     My sister looked at me.  I looked at her.  She shrugged.  So, I
started talking a mile a minute about how we saw a movie and
how my sister taught me how to drive on the highways and how
we went to McDonald's.
     "McDonald's?! When?!"
     "Your mother cooked ribs, you know?" My father was reading
the paper.
     As I talked, my sister went up to my father and gave him a kiss
on the cheek.  He didn't look up from his paper.
     "I know, but we didn't go to McDonald's until before the
movie, and that was a while ago."
     Then, my father said matter-of-factly, "What movie did you
see?"
     I froze, but my sister came through with the name of a movie
just before she kissed my mother on the cheek.  I had never heard
of this movie.
     "Was it any good?"
     I froze again.
     My sister was so calm.  "It was okay.  Those ribs smell great."
     "Yeah," I said.  Then, I thought of something to change the
subject.  "Hey, Dad.  Is the hockey game on tonight?"
     "Yeah, but you're only allowed to watch it with me if you
don't ask any of your stupid questions."
     "Okay, but can I ask one now before it starts?"
     "I don't know.  Can you?"
     "May I?" I asked, corrected.
     He grunted, "Go ahead."
     "What do the players call a hockey puck again?"
     "A biscuit.  They call it a biscuit."
     "Great.  Thanks."
     From that moment and all through dinner, my parents didn't
ask any more questions about our day, although my mom did say
how glad she was that my sister and I were spending more time
together.
     That night, after our parents went to sleep, I went down to the
car and got the pillow and blanket out of the trunk. I brought
them to my sister in her room.  She was pretty tired.  And she
spoke very softly.  She thanked me for the whole day.  She said
that I didn't let her down.  And she said that she wanted it to be
our little secret since she decided to tell her old boyfriend that the
pregnancy was a false alarm.  I guess she just didn't trust him with
the truth anymore.
     Just after I turned out the lights and opened the door, I heard
her say softly,
     "I want you to stop smoking, you hear?"
     "I hear."
     "Because I really do love you, Charlie."
     "I love you, too."
     "I mean it."
     "So do I."
     "Okay, then.  Good night."
     "Good night."
     That's when I shut the door and left her to sleep.
     I didn't feel like reading that night, so I went downstairs and
watched a half-hour-long commercial that advertised an exercise
machine.  They kept flashing a 1-800 number, so I called it.  The
woman who picked up the other end of the phone was named
Michelle.  And I told Michelle that I was a kid and did not need
an exercise machine, but I hoped she was having a good night.
     That's when Michelle hung up on me.  And I didn't mind a bit.
     Love always,
     Charlie
   
March 7, 1992
Dear friend,
     Girls are weird, and I don't mean that offensively.  I just can't
put it any other way.
     I have now gone on another date with Mary Elizabeth.  In a lot
of ways, it was similar to the dance except that we got to wear
more comfortable clothes.  She was the one who asked me out
again, and I suppose that's okay, but I think I'm going to start
doing the asking from time to time because I can't always hope to
get asked.  Also, if I do the asking, then I'll be sure to go out with
the girl of my choice if she says yes.  It's just so complicated.
     The good news is that I got to be the one who drove this time.
I asked my father if I could borrow his car.  It happened at the
dinner table.
     "What for?" My dad gets protective of his car.
     "Charlie's got a girlfr," my sister said.
     "She's not my girlfr," I said.
     "Who is this girl?" my father asked.
     "What's going on?" my mother asked from the kitchen.
     "Charlie wants to borrow the car," my dad replied.
     "What for?" my mother asked.
     "That's what I'm trying to find out!" my father said with a
raised voice.
     "No need to get snippy," my mother said.
     "Sorry," my father said without meaning it.  Then, he turned
back to me.
     "So, tell me about this girl."
     So, I told him a little about Mary Elizabeth, leaving out the
part about the tattoo and belly button ring. He kind of smiled for
a little while, trying to see if I was already guilty of something.
Then, he said yes.  I could borrow his car.  When my mother came
in with coffee, my father told her the whole story while I ate
dessert.
     That night, as I was finishing my book, my father came in and
sat on the edge of my bed.  He lit a cigarette and started telling
me about sex.  He gave me this talk a few years before, but it was
more biological then.  Now, he was saying things like ...
     "I know I'm your old man, but ..."
     "you can't be too careful these days," and
     "wear protection," and
     "if she says no, then you have to assume she means it ..."
     "because if you force her to do something she doesn't want to
do, then you're in big trouble, mister ..."
     "and even if she says no, and really means yes, then quite
frankly she's playing games and isn't worth the price of dinner."
     "if you need to talk to somebody, you can come to me, but if
you don't want to do that for some reason, talk to your brother,"
and finally
     "I'm glad we had this talk."
     Then, my father ruffled my hair, smiled, and left the room.  I
guess I should tell you that my father isn't like on television.
Things like sex don't embarrass him.  And he is actually very
smart about them.
     I think he was especially happy because I used to kiss this boy
in the neighborhood a lot when I was very little, and even though
the psychiatrist said it was very natural for little boys and girls to
explore things like that, I think my father was afraid anyway.  I
guess that's natural, but I'm not sure why.
     Anyway, Mary Elizabeth and I went to see a movie
downtown.  It was what they call an "art" movie.  Mary Elizabeth
said it won an award at some big film festival in Europe, and she
thought that was impressive. As we waited for the movie to start,
she said what a shame it was that so many people would go to see
a stupid Hollywood movie, but there were only a few people in
this theater.  Then, she talked about how she couldn't wait to get
out of here and go to college where people appreciate things like
that.
     Then the movie started.  It was in a foreign language and had
subtitles, which was fun because I had never read a movie before.
The movie itself was very interesting, but I didn't think it was
very good because I didn't really feel different when it was over.
     But Mary Elizabeth felt different.  She kept saying it was an
"articulate" film.  So "articulate." And I guess it was.  The thing
is, I didn't know what it said even if it said it very well.
     Later, I drove us to this underground record store, and Mary
Elizabeth gave me a tour.  She loves this record store.  She said it
was the one place where she felt like herself.  She said that before
coffee shops were popular, there was nowhere for kids like her to
go, except the Big Boy, and that was old until this year.
     She showed me the movie section and told me about all these
cult filmmakers and people from France.  Then, she took me
down to the import section and told me about "real" alternative
music.  Then, she took me to the folk section and told me about
girl bands like the Slits.
     She said she felt really bad she hadn't gotten me anything for
Christmas, and she wanted to make it up to me.  Then, she
bought me a record by Billie Holiday and asked if I wanted to go
to her house and listen to it.
     So, I was sitting alone in her basement while she was upstairs
getting us something to drink.  And I looked around the room,
which was very clean and smelled like people didn't live there.  It
had a fireplace with a mantel and golf trophies.  And there was a
television and a nice stereo.  And then Mary Elizabeth came
downstairs with two glasses and a bottle of brandy.  She said that
she hated everything her parents loved, except for brandy.
     She asked me to pour the drinks while she made a fire.  She
was very excited, too, which was strange because she's never like
that.  She kept talking about how much she loves fires and how
she wanted to marry a man and live in Vermont someday, which
was strange, too, because Mary Elizabeth never talks about things
like that.  When she finished the fire, she put on the record, and
kind of danced over to me.  She said she felt very warm, but not
in the temperature sense.
     The music started, and she clinked my glass, said "cheers," and
took a sip of brandy.  Brandy is very good, by the way, but it was
better at the Secret Santa party.  We finished the first glasses very
quickly.
     My heart was beating really fast, and I was starting to get
nervous.  She handed me another glass of brandy and touched my
hand very softly when she did it.  Then, she slipped her leg over
mine, and I watched it just dangle there.  Then, I felt her hand on
the back of my neck.  Just kind of moving slowly.  And my heart
started beating crazy.
     "Do you like the record?" she asked real quiet.
     "Very much." I really did, too.  It was beautiful.
     "Charlie?"
     "Uh-huh?"
     "Do you like me?"
     "Uh-huh."
     "You know what I mean?"
     "Uh-huh."
     "Are you nervous?"
     "Uh-huh."
     "Don't be nervous."
     "Okay."
     That's when I felt her other hand.  It started at my knee and
worked its way up the side of my leg to my hip and stomach.
Then, she took her leg off mine and kind of sat on my lap facing
me.  She looked right into my eyes, and she never blinked.  Not
once.  Her face looked warm and different.  And she leaned down
and started kissing my neck and ears.  Then my cheeks.  Then my
lips.  And everything kind of melted away.  She took my hand and
slid it up her sweater, and I couldn't believe what was happening
to me.  Or what breasts felt like.  Or later, what they looked like.
Or how difficult bras are.
     After we had done everything you can do from the stomach
up, I lay down on the floor, and Mary Elizabeth put her head on
my chest.  We both breathed very slowly and listened to the music
and the fire crack.  When the last song was over, I felt her breath
on my chest.
     "Charlie?"
     "Uh-huh?"
     "Do you think I'm pretty?"
     "I think you're very pretty."
     "Really?"
     "Really."
     Then, she held on to me a little tighter, and for the next half
hour, Mary Elizabeth didn't talk at all.  All I could do was lie there
and think about how much her voice changed when she asked me
if she was pretty, and how much she changed when I answered,
and how Sam said she didn't like things like that, and how much
my arm was beginning to hurt.
     Thank God we heard the automatic garage door opener when
we did.
     Love always,
     Charlie
   
March 28, 1996
Dear friend,
     It's finally starting to get a little warm here, and the people are
being nicer in the hallways.  Not to me necessarily, just in a
general way.  I wrote a paper about Walden for Bill, but this time
I did it differently.  I didn't write a book report.  I wrote a report
pretending that I was by myself near a lake for two years.  I
pretended that I lived off the land and had insights.  To tell you
the truth, I kind of like the idea of doing that right now.
     Ever since that night with Mary Elizabeth, everything has been
different.  It started out that Monday in school where Sam and
Patrick looked at me with big grins.  Mary Elizabeth had told
them about the night we spent together, which I really didn't
want her to do, but Sam and Patrick thought it was great, and
they were really happy for both of us.  Sam kept saying,
     "I can't believe I didn't think of it before.  You guys are great
together."
     I think Mary Elizabeth thinks so, too, because she's been
acting completely different.  She's nice all the time, but it doesn't
feel right.  I don't know how to describe it.  It's like we'll be
having a cigarette outside with Sam and Patrick at the end of the
day, and we'll all be talking about something until it's time to go
home.  Then, when I get home, Mary Elizabeth will call me right
away and ask me, "What's up?" And I don't know what to say
because the only thing new in my life is my walk home, which
isn't a lot.  But I describe the walk anyway.  And then she starts
talking, and she doesn't stop for a long time.  She's been doing
this all week.  That and picking lint off my clothes.
     At one point two days ago, she was talking about books, and
she included a lot of books I had read. And when I told her that I
had read them, she asked me very long questions that were really
just her ideas with a question mark put at the end.  The only thing
I could say was either "yes" or "no." There was honestly no room
to say anything else.  After that, she started talking about her
plans for college, which I had heard before, so I put down the
phone, went to the bathroom, and when I came back, she was still
talking.  I know that was the wrong thing to do, but I thought if I
didn't take a break, I would do something even worse. Like yell or
hang up the phone.
     She also keeps talking about the Billie Holiday record she
bought for me.  And she says she wants to expose me to all these
great things.  And to tell you the truth, I don't really want to be
exposed to all these great things if it means that I'll have to hear
Mary Elizabeth talk about all the great things she exposed me to
all the time.  It almost feels like of the three things involved: Mary
Elizabeth, me, and the great things, only the first one matters to
Mary Elizabeth.  I don't understand that.  I would give someone a
record so they could love the record, not so they would always
know that I gave it to them.
     Then, there was the dinner.  Since the holidays were over, my
mom asked if I would like to have Sam and Patrick over for
dinner like she promised after I told her they said she had great
taste in clothing.  I was so excited! I told Patrick and Sam, and
we made plans for a Sunday night, and about two hours later,
Mary Elizabeth walked up to me in the hall, and said,
     "What time Sunday?"
     I didn't know what to do.  It was just for Sam and Patrick.
That was the whole idea from the beginning.  And I never even
invited Mary Elizabeth.  I guess I know why she assumed that she
would be invited, but she never even waited to see.  Or even drop
a hint.  Or anything.
     So, at the dinner, the dinner where I wanted my mom and dad
to see how nice and great Sam and Patrick were, Mary Elizabeth
talked the whole time.  It wasn't all her fault.  My dad and mom
asked her more questions than they asked Sam or Patrick.  I guess
because I am going on dates with Mary Elizabeth, and that is
more curious to them than my friends are. I guess that makes
sense.  But still.  It's like they never got to meet Sam and Patrick.
And that was the whole point.  By the time dinner was over, and
they all left, all my mom said was that Mary Elizabeth was smart,
and all my dad said was my "girlfr" was pretty.  They didn't say
anything about Sam or Patrick.  And all I wanted from the whole
night was for them to know my friends.  That was very important
to me.
     Sex things are weird, too.  It's like after that first night, we
have this pattern where we basically do what we did that first
time, but there is no fire or Billie Holiday record because we are
in a car, and everything is rushed.  Maybe this is the way things
are supposed to be, but it doesn't feel right.
     My sister has been reading all these books about women ever
since she told her ex-boyfriend that the pregnancy was a false
alarm, and he wanted to get back together, and she said no.
     So, I asked her about Mary Elizabeth (leaving out the sex part)
because I knew she could be neutral about it, especially since she
"stayed clear" of the dinner.  My sister said Mary Elizabeth is
suffering from low self-esteem, but I told her that she said the
same thing about Sam back in November when she started dating
Craig, and Sam is completely different.  Everything can't be low
self-esteem, can it?
     My sister tried to clarify things.  She said that by introducing
me to all these great things, Mary Elizabeth gained a "superior
position" that she wouldn't need if she was confident about
herself.  She also said that people who try to control situations all
the time are afraid that if they don't, nothing will work out the
way they want.
     I don't know if this is right or not, but it made me sad
regardless.  Not for Mary Elizabeth.  Or for me.  Just in general.
Because I started to think that I didn't know who Mary Elizabeth
was at all.  I'm not saying she was lying to me, but she just acted
so different before I got to know her, and if she really isn't like
what she was at the beginning, I wish she could have just said so.
But maybe she is like she was at the beginning, and I just didn't
realize it.  I just don't want to be another thing Mary Elizabeth is
in charge of.
     I asked my sister what I should do, and she said the best thing
to do is be honest about my feelings.  My psychiatrist said the
same thing.  And then I felt really sad because I thought maybe I
was different from how Mary Elizabeth originally saw me, too.
And maybe I was lying by not telling her that it was hard to listen
to her all the time without getting to say anything back. But I was
just trying to be nice like Sam said I should.  I don't know where I
went wrong.
     I tried to call my brother about this, but his roommate said he
was really busy with school, so I decided not to leave a message
because I didn't want to distract him.  The one thing I did was
mail my report about Walden to him, so he could share it with his
girlfr.  Then, maybe if they had time, they could read it, and we
could talk about it, and I would have the chance to ask them both
what to do about Mary Elizabeth since they were going out in a
good way and would know how to make things work.  Even if
we didn't get to talk about it, I would still love to meet my
brother's girlfr.  Even on the phone.  I did get to see her once on a
VCR tape of one of my brother's football games, but it's really not
the same thing.  Even though she was very beautiful.  But not in
an unconventional way.  I don't know why I'm saying all this.  I
just wish Mary Elizabeth would ask me questions other than
"What's up?"
     Love always,
     Charlie
   
April 18, 1992
Dear friend,
     I have made a terrible mess of things.  I really have.  I feel
terrible about it.  Patrick said the best thing I could do is just stay
away for a while.
     It all started last Monday.  Mary Elizabeth came to school with
a book of poems by a famous poet named every.  every.
cummings.  The story behind the book was that she saw a movie
that talked about one poem that compares this woman's hands to
flowers and rain.  She thought it was so beautiful that she went
out and bought the book.  She has read it a lot of times since, and
she said she wanted me to have my own copy.  Not the copy she
bought, but a new one.
     All day she told me to show everyone the book.
     I know I should have been grateful because it was a very nice
thing to do.  But I wasn't grateful.  I wasn't grateful at all.  Don't
get me wrong.  I acted like I was.  But I wasn't.  To tell you the
truth, I was starting to get mad.  Maybe if she would have given
me the copy of the book that she bought for herself, it would have
been different.  Or maybe if she had just hand-copied the rain
poem she loves on a piece of nice paper.  And definitely if she
didn't make me show the book to everyone we know.
     Maybe I should have been honest then, but it didn't feel like
the right time.
     When I left school that day, I didn't go home because I just
couldn't talk to her on the phone, and my mother is not a very
"adroit" liar about things like that.  So, instead, I walked to the
area where all the shops and video stores are.  I went straight to
the bookstore.  And when the lady behind the counter asked me if
I needed any help, I opened up my bag, and I returned the book
Mary Elizabeth bought me.  I didn't do anything with the money.
It just sat in my pocket.
     When I walked home, all I could think was what a terrible
thing it was that I just did, and I started crying. By the time I
walked in the front door, I was crying so much that my sister
stopped watching television to talk to me.  When I told her what
I did, she drove me back to the bookstore because I was too
messy to drive, and I got the book back, which made me feel a
little better.
     When Mary Elizabeth asked me where I had been all day on
the phone that night, I told her that I went to the store with my
sister.  And when she asked if I bought her something nice, I said
I did.  I didn't even think she was serious, but I said it anyway.  I
just felt so bad about almost returning her book.  I spent the next
hour on the phone listening to her talk about the book.  Then, we
said good night.  Then, I went downstairs to ask my sister if she
could drive me to the store again, so I could get Mary Elizabeth
something nice.  My sister told me to drive myself.  And that I had
better start being honest with Mary Elizabeth about how I feel.
Maybe I should have then, but it just didn't feel like the right
time.
     The next day in school I gave Mary Elizabeth the gift that I
drove to buy her.  It was a new copy of To Kill a Mockingbird.
The first thing Mary Elizabeth said was,
     "That's original."
     I just reminded myself that she didn't say it mean.  She wasn't
making fun of me.  She wasn't comparing.  Or criticizing.  And
she really wasn't.  Believe me.  So, I just explained to her how
Bill gives me special books to read outside of class and how To
Kill a Mockingbird was the first one.  And how it was special to
me.  Then, she said,
     "Thank you.  It's very sweet."
     But then she went on to explain how she had read it three
years earlier and thought it was "overrated" and how they turned
it into a black-and-white film with famous actors like Gregory
Peck and Robert Duvall that won an Academy Award for the
screenplay writer.  I just kind of put my feelings away somewhere
after that.
     I left school, walked around, and didn't get home until one
o'clock in the morning.  When I explained to my father why, he
told me to act like a man.
     The next day in school, when Mary Elizabeth asked where I
had been the day before, I told her that I bought a pack of
cigarettes, went to the Big Boy, and spent the entire day reading
the every.  every.  cummings book and eating club sandwiches.  I
knew I was safe saying that because she would never ask me any
questions about the book.  And I was right.  After she got done
talking about it that time, I didn't think I'd ever really need to read
it myself.  Even if I wanted to.
     I definitely think I should have been honest then, but to tell
you the truth, I was getting as mad as I used to get playing sports,
and it was starting to scare me.
     Luckily, Easter vacation was starting on Friday, and it
distracted things a little bit.  Bill gave me Hamlet to read for the
break.  He said I would need the free time to really concentrate on
the play.  I guess I don't need to say who wrote it.  The only
advice Bill gave me was to think about the main character in
terms of the other main characters in the books I've read thus far.
He said not to get caught up thinking the play was "too fancy."
     So, on Good Friday yesterday, we had a special showing of
The Rocky Horror Picture Show.What made it special was the
fact that everyone knew it was the beginning of Easter vacation,
and a lot of kids were still wearing their suits and dresses from
Mass.  It reminded me of Ash Wednesday in school when the kids
come in with thumbprints on their foreheads.  It always adds an
air of excitement.
     After the show, Craig invited all of us back to his apartment to
drink wine and listen to the White Album. After the record was
over, Patrick suggested we all play truth or dare, a game that he
loves to play when he's "buzzed."
     Guess who chose dares over truth all night? Me.  I just didn't
want to tell Mary Elizabeth the truth because of a game.
     It was working pretty well most of the night.  The dares were
things like "chug a beer." But then, Patrick gave me a dare.  I
don't even think he knew what he was doing, but he gave it to me
anyway.
     "Kiss the prettiest girl in the room on the lips."
     That's when I chose to be honest.  In retrospect, I probably
could not have picked a worse time.
     The silence started after I stood up (since Mary Elizabeth was
sitting right next to me).  By the time I had knelt down in front of
Sam and kissed her, the silence was unbearable.  It wasn't a
romantic kiss.  It was friendly, like when I played Rocky and she
played Janet.  But it didn't matter.
     I could say that it was the wine or the beer that I chugged.  I
could also say that I had forgotten the time Mary Elizabeth asked
me if I thought she was pretty.  But I would be lying.  The truth is
that when Patrick dared me, I knew that if I kissed Mary
Elizabeth, I would be lying to everyone.  Including Sam.
Including Patrick.  Including Mary Elizabeth.  And I just couldn't
do it anymore.  Even if it was part of a game.
     After the silence, Patrick did his best to salvage the evening.
The first thing he said was,
     "Well, isn't this awkward?"
     But it didn't work.  Mary Elizabeth walked quickly out of the
room and into the bathroom.  Patrick told me later that she didn't
want anyone to see her cry.  Sam followed her, but before she
completely left the room, she turned to me and said serious and
dark,
     "What the fuck is wrong with you?"
     It was the look on her face when she said it.  And how much
she meant it.  It suddenly made everything seem like it really was.
I felt terrible.  Just terrible.  Patrick immediately stood up and
took me out of Craig's apartment.  We walked to the street, and
the only thing I was aware of was the cold.  I said that I should go
back inside and apologize.  Patrick said,
     "No.  I'll get our coats.  Just stay here."
     When Patrick left me outside, I started to cry.  It was real and
panicky, and I couldn't stop it.  When Patrick came back, I said,
really crying,
     "I really think I should go apologize."
     Patrick shook his head.  "Believe me.  You don't want to go in
there."
     Then, he jiggled the car keys in front of my face and said,
"Come on.  I'll take you home."
     In the car, I told Patrick everything that had been going on.
About the record.  And the book.  And To Kill a Mockingbird.
And how Mary Elizabeth never asked any questions.  And all
Patrick said was, "It's too bad you're not gay."
     That made me stop crying a little bit.
     "Then again, if you were gay, I would never date you.  You're
a mess."
     That made me start laughing a little bit.
     "And I thought Brad was fucked-up.  Jesus."
     That made me laugh a lot more.  Then, he turned on the radio
and we drove through the tunnels back home.  When he dropped
me off, Patrick told me the best thing to do was keep away for a
while.  I guess I already told you that.  He said that when he knew
more, he'd give me a call.
     "Thanks, Patrick."
     "Don't mention it."
     And then I said, "You know, Patrick? If I were gay, I'd want to
date you."
     I don't know why I said it, but it seemed right.
     Patrick just smiled cocky and said, "Of course." Then, he
peeled out down the road.
     When I lay down in bed that night, I put on the Billie Holiday
record, and I started reading the book of every.  every.  cummings
poems.  After I read the poem that compares the woman's hands
to flowers and rain, I put the book down and went to the
window.  I stared at my reflection and the trees behind it for a
long time.  Not thinking anything.  Not feeling anything.  Not
hearing the record.  For hours.
 Something really is wrong with me.  And I don't know what it is.
     Love always,
     Charlie
   
April 26, 1992
Dear friend,
     Nobody has called me since that night.  I don't blame them.  I
have spent the whole vacation reading Hamlet.  Bill was right.  It
was much easier to think of the kid in the play like the other
characters I've read about so far.  It has also helped me while I'm
trying to figure out what's wrong with me.  It didn't give me any
answers necessarily, but it was helpful to know that someone else
has been through it.  Especially someone who lived such a long
time ago.
     I did call Mary Elizabeth, and I told her that I'd been listening
to the record every night and reading the every.  every.  cummings
book.
     She just said, "It's too late, Charlie."
     I would have explained that I didn't want to start going on
dates again and I was just doing these things as a friend, but I
knew it would have only made things worse, so I didn't.
     I just said, "I'm sorry."
     And I really was sorry.  And I know that she believed me.  But
when that didn't make any difference, and there was nothing but
a bad silence on the phone, I really knew it was too late.
     Patrick did call me, but all he said was that Craig got really
angry at Sam about me, and I should keep staying away until
things got clear.  I asked him if he would like to go out, just him
and me.  He said that he would be busy with Brad and family
things, but he'd try to call me if he could find the time. So far, he
hasn't.
     I would tell you about Easter Sunday with my family, but I've
already told you about Thanksgiving and Christmas, and there
really isn't much of a difference.
     Except that my father got a raise, and my mother didn't
because she doesn't get paid for housework, and my sister stopped
reading those self-esteem books because she met a new boy.
     My brother did come home, but when I asked him if his girlfr
read my report on Walden, he said no because she broke up with
him when she found out he was cheating on her.  That happened
a while ago.  So, I asked him if he had read it himself, and he said
that he hadn't because he was too busy.  He said he would try to
read it over vacation.  So far, he hasn't.
     So, I went to visit my aunt Helen, and for the first time in my
life, it didn't help.  I even tried to follow my own plan and
remember all the details about the last time I had a great week,
but that didn't help, either.
     I know that I brought this all on myself.  I know that I deserve
this.  I'd do anything not to be this way.  I'd do anything to make
it up to everyone.  And to not have to see a psychiatrist, who
explains to me about being "passive aggressive." And to not have
to take the medicine he gives me, which is too expensive for my
dad.  And to not have to talk about bad memories with him.  Or
be nostalgic about bad things.
     I just wish that God or my parents or Sam or my sister or
someone would just tell me what's wrong with me.  Just tell me
how to be different in a way that makes sense.  To make this all
go away.  And disappear.  I know that's wrong because it's my
responsibility, and I know that things get worse before they get
better because that's what my psychiatrist says, but this is a worse
that feels too big.
     After a week of not talking to anyone, I finally called Bob.  I
know that's wrong, but I didn't know what else to do.  I asked
him if he had anything I could buy.  He said he had a quarter
ounce of pot left.  So, I took some of my Easter money and
bought it.
     I've been smoking it all the time since.
     Love always,
     Charlie
   
Part 4
   
April 29, 1992
Dear friend,
     I wish I could report that it's getting better, but unfortunately
it isn't.  It's hard, too, because we've started school again, and I
can't go to the places where I used to go.  And it can't be like it
was.  And I wasn't ready to say good-bye just yet.
     To tell you the truth, I've just been avoiding everything.
     I walk around the school hallways and look at the people.  I
look at the teachers and wonder why they're here.  If they like
their jobs.  Or us.  And I wonder how smart they were when they
were fifteen.  Not in a mean way.  In a curious way.  It's like
looking at all the students and wondering who's had their heart
broken that day, and how they are able to cope with having three
quizzes and a book report on top of that.  Or wondering who did
the heart breaking.  And wondering why.  Especially since I know
that if they went to another school, the person who had their
heart broken would have had their heart broken by somebody
else, so why does it have to be so personal? And if I went to
another school, I would never have known Sam or Patrick or
Mary Elizabeth or anyone except my family.
     I can tell you one thing that happened.  I was in the shopping
mall because that's where I go lately.  For the last couple of
weeks, I've been going there every day, trying to figure out why
people go there.  It's kind of a personal project.
     There was this one little boy.  He might have been four years
old.  I'm not sure.  He was crying really hard, and he kept
screaming for his mom.  He must have been lost.  Then, I saw this
older kid, who was maybe seventeen.  I think he went to a
different school because I had never seen him before.  Anyway,
this older kid, who was really tough-looking with a leather jacket
and long hair and everything, went up to the little boy and asked
him what his name was.  The little boy answered and stopped
crying.
     Then, the older kid walked away with the little boy.
     A minute later, I heard the intercom say to the mom that her
boy was at the information desk.  So, I went to the information
desk to see what would happen.
     I guess the mom had been searching for the little boy for a long
time because she came running up to the information desk, and
when she saw the little boy, she started crying.  She held him
tightly and told him to never run off again.  Then, she thanked the
older kid who had helped, and all the older kid said was, "Next
time just watch him a little fucking better."
     Then, he walked away.
     The man with the moustache behind the information desk was
speechless.  So was the mom.  The little boy just wiped his nose,
looked up at his mom, and said,
     "French fries."
     The mom looked down at the little boy and nodded, and they
left.  So, I followed them.  They went to the place where the food
stands are, and they got french fries.  The little boy was smiling
and getting ketchup all over himself.  And the mom kept wiping
his face in between taking drags off her cigarette.
     I kept looking at the mom, trying to imagine what she must
have looked like when she was young.  If she was married.  If her
little boy was an accident or planned.  And if that made a
difference.
     I saw other people there.  Old men sitting alone.  Young girls
with blue eye shadow and awkward jaws.  Little kids who looked
tired.  Fathers in nice coats who looked even more tired.  Kids
working behind the counters of the food places who looked like
they hadn't had the will to live for hours.  The machines kept
opening and closing.  The people kept giving money and getting
their change.  And it all felt very unsettling to me.
     So, I decided to find another place to go and figure out why
people go there.  Unfortunately, there aren't a lot of places like
that.  I don't know how much longer I can keep going without a
friend.  I used to be able to do it very easily, but that was before I
knew what having a friend was like.  It's much easier not to know
things sometimes.  And to have french fries with your mom be
enough.
     The only person I've really talked to in the last two weeks was
Susan, the girl who used to "go with" Michael back in middle
school when she had braces.  I saw her standing in the hall,
surrounded by a group of boys I didn't know.  They were all
laughing and making sex jokes, and Susan was doing her best to
laugh along with them.  When she saw me approaching the
group, her face went "ashen." It was almost like she didn't want
to remember what she was like twelve months ago, and she
certainly didn't want the boys to know that she knew me and
used to be my friend.  The whole group got quiet and stared at
me, but I didn't even notice them.  I just looked at Susan, and all I
said was,
     "Do you ever miss him?"
     I didn't say it mean or accusingly.  I just wanted to know if
anybody else remembered Michael.  To tell you the truth, I was
stoned in a bad way, and I couldn't get the question out of my
mind.
     Susan was at a loss.  She didn't know what to do.  These were
the first words we had spoken since the end of last year.  I guess it
wasn't fair of me to ask her in a group like that, but I never see
her by herself anymore, and I really needed to know.
     At first, I thought her blank expression was the result of
surprise, but after it didn't go away for a long while, I knew that it
wasn't.  It suddenly dawned on me that if Michael were still
around, Susan probably wouldn't be "going out" with him
anymore.  Not because she's a bad person or shallow or mean.
But because things change.  And friends leave.  And life doesn't
stop for anybody.
     "I'm sorry I bothered you, Susan.  I'm just having a tough time.
That's all.  Have a good one," I said and walked away.
     "God, that kid is such a fucking freak," I heard one of the boys
whisper when I was halfway down the hall.  He said it more
factual than mean, and Susan didn't correct him.  I don't know if I
would have corrected him myself these days.
     Love always,
     Charlie
   
May 2, 1992
Dear friend,
     A few days ago, I went to see Bob to buy more pot.  I should
probably say that I keep forgetting Bob doesn't go to school with
us.  Probably because he watches more television than anyone I
know, and he's great with trivia.  You should see him talk about
Mary Tyler Moore.  It's kind of spooky.
     Bob has this very specific way of living.  He says he takes a
shower every other day.  He weighs his "stash" daily.  He says
when you're smoking a cigarette with someone, and you have a
lighter, you should light their cigarette first. But if you have
matches, you should light your cigarette first, so you breathe in
the "harmful sulfur" instead of them. He says it's the polite thing
to do.  He also says that it's bad luck to have "three on a match."
He heard that from his uncle who fought in Vietnam.  Something
about how three cigarettes was enough time for the enemy to
know where you are.
     Bob says that when you're alone, and you light a cigarette, and
the cigarette is only halfway lit that means someone is thinking
about you.  He also says that when you find a penny, it's only
"lucky" if it's heads-up.  He says the best thing to do is find a
lucky penny when you're with someone and give the other person
the good luck. He believes in karma.  He also loves to play cards.
     Bob goes part-time to the local community college.  He wants
to be a chef.  He is an only child, and his parents are never home.
He says it used to bother him a lot when he was younger, but not
so much anymore.
     The thing about Bob is that when you first meet him, he's
really interesting because he knows about cigarette rules and
pennies and Mary Tyler Moore.  But after you've known him for a
while, he starts to repeat these things.  In the last few weeks, he
hasn't said anything that I haven't heard from him before.  That's
what made it such a shock when he told me what happened.
     Basically, Brad's father caught Brad and Patrick together.
     I guess that Brad's father didn't know about his son because
when he caught them, Brad's father started beating Brad.  Not a
slap kind of beating.  A belt kind.  A real kind.  Patrick told Sam
who told Bob that he had never seen anything like it.  I guess it
was that bad.  He wanted to say "Stop" and "You're killing him."
He even wanted to hold Brad's father down.  But he just froze.
And Brad kept yelling, "Get out!" to Patrick.  And finally, Patrick
just did.
     That was last week.  And Brad still hasn't come to school.
Everyone thinks he might have been sent to a military school or
something.  Nobody knows for sure about anything.  Patrick tried
calling once, but when Brad's father answered, he just hung up.
     Bob said Patrick was "in bad shape." I can't tell you how sad I
felt when he told me that because I wanted to call Patrick and be
his friend and help him.  But I didn't know if I should call him
because of what he had said about waiting until things got clear.
The thing was I couldn't think about anything else.
     So, on Friday, I went to The Rocky Horror Picture Show.  I
waited until the movie had already started before I went into the
theater.  I didn't want to ruin the show for everybody.  I just
wanted to see Patrick play Frank 'n Furter just like he always does
because I knew that if I saw that, I knew he would be okay.  Just
like my sister getting mad at me for smoking cigarettes.
     I sat in the back row and looked on the stage.  It was still a
couple of scenes before Frank 'n Furter enters.  That's when I saw
Sam playing Janet.  And I missed her so much.  And I was so
sorry about how I messed everything up.  Especially when I saw
Mary Elizabeth playing Magenta.  It was all very hard to watch.
But then Patrick finally came on as Frank 'n Furter, and he was
great.  He was actually better than ever in a lot of ways.  It was
just so nice to see all my friends.  I left before the movie was over.
     I drove home listening to some of the songs we listened to
those times when we were infinite.  And I pretended they were in
the car with me.  I even talked out loud.  I told Patrick how I
thought he was great.  I asked Sam about Craig.  I told Mary
Elizabeth that I was sorry and how much I really loved the every.
every.  cummings book and wanted to ask her questions about it.
But then I stopped because it started to make me too sad.  I also
thought that if anybody saw me talking out loud when I was
alone in the car, their looks might convince me that the something
that's wrong with me might be even worse than I thought.
     When I got home, my sister was watching a movie with her
new boyfriend.  There isn't much to say other than his name is
Erik, and he has short hair and is a junior.  Erik had rented the
movie.  After I shook hands with him, I asked them about the
movie because I didn't recognize it except for an actor who used
to be on a TV show, and I couldn't remember his name.
     My sister said, "It's stupid.  You wouldn't like it."
     I said, "What's it about?"
     She said, "Come on, Charlie.  It's almost over."
     I said, "Would it be okay if I watched the end?"
     She said, "You can watch it when we're done."
     I said, "Well, how about I watch the end with you, and then I
can rewind it and watch up to the point I started watching with
you?"
     That's when she paused the movie.
     "Can't you take a hint?"
     "I suppose not."
     "We want to be alone, Charlie."
     "Oh.  I'm sorry."
     To tell you the truth, I knew she wanted to be alone with Erik,
but I really wanted to have some company.  I knew it wasn't fair,
though, to ruin her time just because I miss everybody, so I just
said good night and left.
     I went up to my room and started reading the new book Bill
gave me.  It's called The Stranger.  Bill said that it's "very easy to
read, but very hard to `read well.'" I have no idea what he means,
but I like the book so far.
     Love always,
     Charlie
   
May 8, 1992
Dear friend,
     It's strange how things can change back as suddenly as they
changed originally.  When one thing happens and suddenly, things
are back to normal.
     On Monday, Brad came back to school.
     He looked very different.  It wasn't that he was bruised or
anything.  His face actually looked fine.  But before, Brad was
always this guy who walked down the hallway with a bounce.  I
can't really describe it any other way.  It's just that some people
walk with their heads to the ground for some reason.  They don't
like to look other people in the eye.  Brad was never like that.
But now he is.  Especially when it comes to Patrick.
     I saw them talking quiet in the hallway.  I was too far away to
hear what they said, but I could tell that Brad was ignoring
Patrick.  And when Patrick started to get upset, Brad just closed
his locker and walked away.  It wasn't that strange because Brad
and Patrick never talked in school since Brad wanted things to be
secret.  The strange part was that Patrick would walk up to Brad
in the first place.  So, I guessed that they didn't meet on the golf
courses anymore.  Or talk on the phone even.
     Later that afternoon, I was having a cigarette outside by
myself, and I saw Patrick alone, also having a cigarette.  I wasn't
close enough to really see him, but I didn't want to interfere with
his personal time, so I didn't walk up to him.  But Patrick was
crying.  He was crying pretty hard.  After that, whenever I saw
him around anywhere, he didn't look like he was there.  He
looked like he was someplace else.  And I think I knew that
because that's how people used to say I was.  Maybe they still do.
I'm not sure.
     On Thursday, something really terrible happened.
     I was sitting alone in the cafeteria, eating salisbury steak,
when I saw Patrick walk up to Brad, who was sitting with his
football buddies, and I saw Brad ignore him like he did at the
locker.  And I saw Patrick get really upset, but Brad still ignored
him.  Then, I saw Patrick say something, and he looked pretty
angry as he turned to walk away.  Brad sat still for a second, then
he turned around.  And then I heard it.  It was just loud enough
for a few tables to hear.  The thing that Brad yelled at Patrick.
     "Faggot!"
     Brad's football buddies start laughing.  A few tables got quiet
as Patrick turned around.  He was mad as hell.  I'm not kidding.
He stormed up to Brad's table and said,
     "What did you call me?"
     God, he was mad.  I'd never seen Patrick like that before.
     Brad sat quiet for a second, but his buddies kept egging him
on by pushing his shoulders.  Brad looked up at Patrick and said
softer and meaner than the last time,
     "I called you a faggot."
     Brad's buddies started laughing even harder.  That is, until
Patrick threw the first punch.  It's kind of eerie when a whole
room gets quiet at once, and then the real noise starts.
     The fight was hard.  A lot harder than the one I had with Sean
last year.  There was no clean punching or things you see in
movies.  They just wrestled and hit.  And whoever was the most
aggressive or the most angry got in the most hits.  In this case, it
was pretty even until Brad's buddies got involved, and it became
five on one.
     That's when I got involved.  I just couldn't watch them hurt
Patrick even if things weren't clear just yet.
     I think anyone who knew me might have been frightened or
confused.  Except maybe my brother.  He taught me what to do
in these situations.  I don't really want to go into detail except to
say that by the end of it, Brad and two of his buddies stopped
fighting and just stared at me.  His other two friends were lying
on the ground.  One was clutching the knee I bashed in with one
of those metal cafeteria chairs.  The other one was holding his
face.  I kind of swiped at his eyes, but not too bad.  I didn't want
to be too bad.
     I looked down at the ground, and I saw Patrick.  His face was
pretty messed up, and he was crying hard.  I helped him to his
feet, and then I looked at Brad.  I don't think we'd ever really
exchanged two words before, but I guess this was the time to
start.  All I said was,
     "If you ever do this again, I'll tell everyone.  And if that doesn't
work, I'll blind you."
     I pointed at his friend who was holding his face, and I knew
Brad heard me and knew that I meant it.  He didn't say anything
back, though, because the security guards of our school came to
bring all of us out of the cafeteria.  They took us first to the nurse,
and then to Mr.  Small.  Patrick started the fight, so he was
suspended for a week.  Brad's buddies got three days each for
ganging up on Patrick after they broke up the original fight. Brad
wasn't suspended at all because it was self-defense.  I didn't get
suspended either because I was just helping to defend a friend
when it was five on one.
     Brad and I got a month's detention, starting that day.
     In detention, Mr.  Harris didn't set up any rules.  He just let us
read or do homework or talk.  It really isn't much of a punishment
unless you like the television programs right after school or are
very concerned with your permanent record.  I wonder if it's all a
lie.  A permanent record, I mean.
     On that first day of detention, Brad came to sit next to me.  He
looked very sad.  I think it all kind of hit him after he stopped
feeling numb from the fight.
     "Charlie?"
     "Yeah?"
     "Thanks.  Thanks for stopping them."
     "You're welcome."
     And that was it.  I haven't said anything to him since.  And he
didn't sit next to me today.  At first when he said it, I was kind of
confused.  But then I think I got it.  Because I wouldn't want a
bunch of my friends beating up Sam even if I wasn't allowed to
like her anymore either.
     When I got out of detention that day, Sam was waiting for me.
 The minute I saw her, she smiled.  I was numb.  I just couldn't
believe she was really there.  Then, I saw her turn and give Brad a
real cold look.
     Brad said, "Tell him I'm sorry."
     Sam replied, "Tell him yourself."
     Brad looked away and walked to his car.  Then, Sam walked
up to me and messed up my hair.
     "So, I heard you're this ninja or something."
     I think I nodded.
     Sam drove me home in her pickup truck.  On the way, she told
me that she was really angry at me for doing what I did to Mary
Elizabeth.  She told me that Mary Elizabeth is a really old friend
of hers.  She even reminded me that Mary Elizabeth was there for
her when she went through that tough time she told me about
when she gave me the typewriter.  I don't really want to repeat
what that was.
     So, she said that when I kissed her instead of Mary Elizabeth, I
really hurt their friendship for a while. Because I guess Mary
Elizabeth really liked me a lot.  That made me feel sad because I
didn't know that she liked me that much.  I just thought she
wanted to expose me to all those great things.  That's when Sam
said,
     "Charlie, you're so stupid sometimes.  Do you know that?"
     "Yeah.  I really do.  Know that.  Honest."
     Then, she said that Mary Elizabeth and she got over it, and she
thanked me for taking Patrick's advice and staying away for as
long as I did because it made things easier.  So, then I said,
     "So, we can be friends now?"
     "Of course," was all she said.
     "And Patrick?"
     "And Patrick."
     "And everyone else?"
     "And everyone else."
     That's when I started crying.  But Sam told me to shush.
     "You remember what I said to Brad?"
     "Yeah.  You told him that he should tell Patrick that he was
sorry himself."
     "That goes for Mary Elizabeth, too."
     "I tried, but she told me ..."
     "I know you tried.  I'm telling you to try again."
     "Okay."
     Sam dropped me off.  When she was too far away to see me, I
started to cry again.  Because she was my friend again.  And that
was enough for me.  So, I made myself promise to never mess up
like I did before.  And I'm never going to.  I can tell you that.
     When I went to The Rocky Horror Picture Show tonight, it
was very tense.  Not because of Mary Elizabeth.  That was
actually okay.  I said I was sorry, and then I asked her if there was
anything she wanted to say to me.  And like before, I asked a
question and got a very long answer.  When I was done listening
(I really did listen), I said I was sorry again.  Then, she thanked me
for not trying to make what I did seem less by offering a lot of
excuses.  And things were back to normal except we were just
friends.
     To tell you the truth, I think the biggest reason for everything
being okay is that Mary Elizabeth started dating one of Craig's
friends.  His name is Peter, and he's in college, which makes Mary
Elizabeth happy.  At the party at Craig's apartment, I overheard
Mary Elizabeth say to Alice that she was much happier with Peter
because he was "opinionated," and they had debates.  She said
that I was really sweet and understanding, but that our
relationship was too one-sided.  She wanted a person who was
more open to discussion and didn't need someone's permission to
talk.
     I wanted to laugh.  Or maybe get mad.  Or maybe shrug at
how strange everyone was, especially me.  But I was at a party
with my friends, so it really didn't matter that much.  I just drank
because I figured that it was about time to stop smoking so much
pot.
     The thing that made the evening tense was Patrick officially
quit doing Frank 'Not Furter in the show.  He said that he didn't
want to do it anymore ...  ever.  So, he sat and watched the show
in the audience with me, and he said things that were hard to
listen to because Patrick usually isn't unhappy.
     "You ever think, Charlie, that our group is the same as any
other group like the football team? And the only real difference
between us is what we wear and why we wear it?"
     "Yeah?" And there was this pause.
     "Well, I think it's all bullshit."
     And he meant it.  It was hard to see him mean it that much.
     Some guy that I didn't know from somewhere else did the part
of Frank 'Not Furter.  He had been the second to Patrick for a
long time, and now he got his chance.  He was pretty good, too.
Not as good as Patrick, but pretty good.
     Love always,
     Charlie
   
May 11, 1992
Dear friend,
     I've been spending a lot of time with Patrick these days.  I
really haven't said much.  I just kind of listen and nod because
Patrick needs to talk.  But it isn't like it was with Mary Elizabeth.
It's different.
     It started out on the Saturday morning after the show.  I was
in my bed trying to figure out why sometimes you can wake up
and go back to sleep and other times you can't. Then, my mom
knocked.
     "Your friend Patrick's on the phone."
     So, I got up and wiped away the sleep.
     "Hello?"
     "Get dressed.  I'm on my way."
     Click.  That was it.  I actually had a lot of work to do since it
was getting closer to the end of the school year, but it sounded
like we might be having some kind of adventure, so I got dressed
anyway.
     Patrick pulled up about ten minutes later.  He was wearing the
same clothes he wore the night before.  He hadn't showered or
anything.  I don't even think he went to bed.  He was just wide
awake on coffee and cigarettes and Mini Thins, which are these
small pills you can buy at Quick Marts or Truck Stops.  They keep
you awake! They're not illegal either, but they make you thirsty.
     So, I climbed in Patrick's car, which was filled with cigarette
smoke.  He offered me one, but I said not in front of my house.
     "Your parents don't know you smoke?"
     "No.  Should they?"
     "I guess not."
     Then, we started driving ...  fast.
     At first, Patrick didn't say much.  He just listened to the music
on the tape player.  After the second song started, I asked him if it
was the mix tape I made him for Secret Santa Christmas.
     "I've been listening to it all night."
     Patrick had this smile all over his face.  It was a sick smile.
Glazey and numb.  He just turned up the volume.  And drove
faster.
     "I'll tell you something, Charlie.  I feel good.  You know what
I mean? Really good.  Like I'm free or something.  Like I don't
have to pretend anymore.  I'm going away to college, right? It'll
be different there.  You know what I mean?"
     "Sure," I said.
     "I've been thinking all night about what kind of posters I want
to put up in my dorm room.  And if I'll have an exposed brick
wall.  I've always wanted an exposed brick wall, so I can paint it.
Know what I mean?"
     I just nodded this time because he didn't really wait for a
"sure."
     "Things'll be different there.  They have to be."
     "They will be," I said.
     "You really think so?"
     "Sure."
     "Thanks, Charlie."
     That's kind of how it went all day.  We went to see a movie.
And we ate pizza.  And every time Patrick started getting tired,
we got coffee, and he ate another Mini Thin or two.  When things
started turning dusk outside, he showed me all the places he and
Brad would meet.  He didn't say much about them.  He just
stared.
     We ended up at the golf course.
     We sat on the eighteenth green, which was pretty high on a
hill, and we watched the sun disappear.  By this point, Patrick
had bought a bottle of red wine with his fake ID, and we passed
it back and forth.  Just talking.
     "Did you hear about Lily?" he asked.
     "Who?"
     "Lily Miller.  I don't know what her real first name was, but
they called her Lily.  She was a senior when I was a sophomore."
     "I don't think so."
     "I thought your brother would have told you.  It's a classic."
     "Maybe."
     "Okay.  Stop me if you heard it."
     "Okay."
     "So, Lily comes up here with this guy who was the lead in all
the plays."
     "Parker?"
     "Right, Parker.  How did you know?"
     "My sister had a crush on him."
     "Perfect!" We were getting pretty drunk.  "So, Parker and Lily
come up here one night.  And they are so in love! He even gave
her his thespian pin or something."
     At this point, Patrick is spitting out wine between sentences,
he's laughing so hard.
     "They even had a song.  Something like Broken Wings by that
band, Mr.  Mister.  I don't even know, but I hope it was Broken
Wings because it would make the story perfect."
     "Keep going," I encouraged.
     "Okay.  Okay." He swallowed.  "So, they've been going out
for a long time, and I think they've even had sex before, but this
was going to be a special night.  She packed a little picnic, and he
brought a boom box to play Broken Wings."
     Patrick just couldn't get over that song.  He laughed for ten
minutes.
     "Okay.  Okay.  I'm sorry.  So, they have this picnic with
sandwiches and everything.  They start to make out.  The stereo's
playing, and they're just about to `do it' when Parker realizes he
forgot the condoms.  They're both naked on this putting green.
They both want each other.  There's no condom.  So, what do
you think happened?"
     "I don't know."
     "They did it doggie-style with one of the sandwich bags!"
     "NO!" was all I could really say.
     "YES!" was Patrick's rebuttal.
     "GOD!" was my counter.
     "YES!" was Patrick's conclusion.
     After we shook off the giggles and wasted most of the wine
with spit takes, he turned to me.
     "And you want to know the best part?"
     "What?"
     "She was the valedictorian.  And everyone knew it when she
went up to give her speech!"
     There's nothing like the deep breaths after laughing that hard.
Nothing in the world like a sore stomach for the right reasons.  It
was that great.
     So, Patrick and I shared all the stories we could think of.
     There was a kid named Barry, who used to build kites in art
class.  Then, after school, he would attach firecrackers to the kite
and fly it and blow it up.  He's now studying to be an air traffic
controller.
     --Patrick's story via Sam
     And then there was this kid named Chip who spent all of his
money from allowance and Christmas and birthdays to buy bug
killing equipment and he would go door to door asking if he
could kill the bugs for free.
     --my story via my sister
     There was a guy named Carl Burns and everyone called him
C.B.  And one day C.B.  got so drunk at a party that he tried to
"fuck" the host's dog.
     --Patrick's story
     And there was this guy they called "Action Jack" because
supposedly he was caught masturbating at a drunk party.  And at
every pep rally, the kids would clap and chant.  Action Jack ...
clap clap clap ...  Action Jack!
     --my story via my brother
     There were other stories and other names.  Second Base Stace,
who had breasts in the fourth grade and let some of the boys feel
them.  Vincent, who took acid and tried to flush a sofa down the
toilet.  Sheila, who allegedly masturbated with a hot dog and had
to go to the emergency room.  The list went on and on.
     By the end, all I could think was what these people must feel
like when they go to their class reunions.  I wonder if they're
embarrassed, and I wonder if that's a small price to pay for being a
legend.
     After we sobered up a bit with coffee and Mini Thins, Patrick
drove me home.  The mix tape I made for him hit a bunch of
winter songs.  And Patrick turned to me.
     "Thanks, Charlie."
     "Sure."
     "No.  I mean in the cafeteria."
     "Sure."
     After that, it was quiet.  He drove me home and pulled up in
the driveway.  We hugged good night, and when I was just about
to let go, he held me a little tighter.  And he moved his face to
mine.  And he kissed me.  A real kiss.  Then, he pulled away real
slow.
     "I'm sorry."
     "No.  That's okay."
     "Really.  I'm sorry."
     "No, really.  It was okay."
     So, he said "thanks" and hugged me again.  And moved in to
kiss me again.  And I just let him.  I don't know why.  We stayed
in his car for a long time.
     We didn't do anything other than kiss.  And we didn't even do
that for very long.  After a while, his eyes lost the glazey numb
look from the wine or the coffee or the fact that he had stayed up
the night before. Then, he started crying.  Then, he started talking
about Brad.
     And I just let him.  Because that's what friends are for.
     Love always,
     Charlie
   
May 17, 1992
Dear friend,
     It seems like every morning since that first night, I wake up
dull, and my head hurts, and I can't breathe. Patrick and I have
been spending a lot of time together.  We drink a lot.  Actually,
it's more like Patrick drinks, and I sip.
     It's just hard to see a friend hurt this much.  Especially when
you can't do anything except "be there." I want to make him stop
hurting, but I can't. So, I just follow him around whenever he
wants to show me his world.
     One night Patrick took me to this park where men go to find
each other.  Patrick told me that if I didn't want to be bothered by
anyone that I should just not make eye contact. He said that eye
contact is how you agree to fool around anonymously.  Nobody
talks.  They just find places to go.  After a while, Patrick saw
someone he liked.  He asked me if I needed any cigarettes, and
when I said no, he patted my shoulder and walked away with this
boy.
     I just sat on a bench, looking around.  All I saw were the
shadows of people.  Some on the ground.  Some by a tree.  Some
just walking.  It was so quiet.  After a few minutes, I lit a
cigarette, and I heard somebody whisper.
     "You got an extra cigarette?" the voice asked.
     I turned around and saw a man in shadow.
     "Sure," I said.
     I reached out to hand the man a cigarette.  He took it.
     "You got a light?" he said.
     "Sure," I said, and I struck a match for him.
     Instead of just leaning down and lighting the cigarette, he
reached out to make a cup around the match with our hands,
which is something we all do when it's windy.  But it wasn't
windy.  I think he just wanted to touch my hands because while
he was lighting the cigarette, he did it for a lot longer than
necessary.  Maybe he wanted me to see his face over the glow of
the match.  To see how handsome he was.  I don't know.  He did
look familiar.  But I couldn't figure out from where.
     He blew out the match.  "Thanks." And exhaled.
     "No problem," I said.
     "Mind if I sit down?" he asked.
     "Not really."
     He sat down.  And said a few things.  And it was his voice.  I
recognized his voice.  So, I lit another cigarette and looked at his
face again, and thought hard, and that's when I figured it out.  It
was the guy who does the sports on the TV news!
     "Nice night," he said.
     I couldn't believe it! I guess I managed to nod because he kept
talking.  About sports! He kept talking about how the designated
hitter in baseball was bad and why basketball was a commercial
success and what teams looked promising in college football.  He
even mentioned my brother's name! I swear!
     All I said was, "So, what's it like being on television?"
     It must have been the wrong thing to say because he just got
up and walked away.  It was too bad because I wanted to ask him
if he thought my brother would make it to the pros.
     Another night, Patrick took me to this place where they sell
poppers, which is this drug you inhale.  They didn't have poppers,
but the guy behind the counter said that he had something that
was just as good.  So, Patrick bought that.  It was in this aerosal
can.  We both took a sniff of it, and I swear we both thought we
were going to die of a heart attack.
     All in all, I think Patrick took me to about every place there is
to go that I wouldn't have known about otherwise. There was
this karaoke bar on one of the main streets in the city.  And there
was this dance club.  And this one bathroom in this one gym.  All
these places.  Sometimes, Patrick would pick up guys.
Sometimes, he wouldn't.  He said that it was hard being safe.
And you never know.
     The nights he would pick up someone always made him sad.
It's hard, too, because Patrick began every night really excited.
He always said he felt free.  And tonight was his destiny.  And
things like that.  But by the end of that night, he just looked sad.
Sometimes, he would talk about Brad.  Sometimes, he wouldn't.
But after a while, the whole thing just wasn't interesting to him
anymore, and he ran out of things to keep himself numb.
     So, tonight, he dropped me off at home.  It was the night we
went back to the park where men meet.  And the night he saw
Brad there with some guy.  Brad was too into what he was doing
to notice us.  Patrick didn't say anything.  He didn't do anything.
He just walked back to the car.  And we drove in silence.  On the
way, he threw the bottle of wine out the window.  And it landed
with a crash.  And this time he didn't try to kiss me like he had
every night.  He just thanked me for being his friend.  And drove
away.
     Love always,
     Charlie
   
May 21, 1992
Dear friend,
     The school year is just about over.  We have another month or
so to go.  But the seniors like my sister and Sam and Patrick only
have a couple of weeks.  Then, they have prom and graduation,
and they are all busy making plans.
     Mary Elizabeth is taking her new boyfriend, Peter.  My sister is
taking Erik.  Patrick is going with Alice.  And Craig agreed to go
with Sam this time.  They have even rented a limo and
everything.  Not my sister, though.  She's going in her new
boyfriend's car, which is a Buick.
     Bill has been very sentimental lately because he can feel his
first year of teaching coming to an end.  At least that's what he
said to me.  He was planning on moving to New York and
writing plays, but he told me that he doesn't really think he wants
to anymore.  He really likes teaching kids English and thinks
maybe he can take over the drama department, too, next year.
     I guess he's been thinking about this a lot because he hadn't
given me a new book to read since The Stranger.He did ask me to
watch a lot of movies, though, and write an essay about what I
thought of all those movies.  The movies were The Graduate,
Harold and Maude, My Life as a Dog (which has subtitles!),
Dead Poets Society, and a movie called The Unbelievable Truth,
which was very hard to find.
     I watched all the movies in one day.  It was quite great.
     The essay I wrote was very similar to the past few essays I
wrote because everything Bill tells me to read or see are similar.
Except the time he had me read Naked Lunch.
     Incidentally, he told me he had given me that book because he
had just broken up with his girlfr and was feeling philosophical.  I
guess that's why he was sad that afternoon when we talked about
On the Road.  He apologized for letting his personal life affect his
teaching, and I accepted because I didn't know what else to do.
It's strange to think about your teachers as being people even
when they're Bill.  I guess he has since made up with his girlfr.
They're living together now.  At least that's what he said.
     So, in school Bill gave me my final book to read for the year.
It's called The Fountainhead, and it's very long.
     When he gave me the book, Bill said, "Be skeptical about this
one.  It's a great book.  But try to be a filter, not a sponge."
     Sometimes, I think Bill forgets that I am sixteen.  But I am
very happy that he does.
     I haven't started reading it because I am very behind in my
other classes because I spent so much time with Patrick. But if I
can catch up, I will end my first year with straight A's, which
makes me very happy.  I almost didn't get an A in math, but then
Mr.  Carlo told me to stop asking "why?" all the time and just
follow the formulas.  So, I did.  Now, I get perfect scores on all
my tests.  I just wish I knew what the formulas did.  I honestly
have no idea.
     I was just thinking that I wrote to you first because I was
afraid about starting high school.  Today, I feel good, so that's
kind of funny.
     By the way, Patrick stopped drinking that night he saw Brad
in the park.  I guess he's feeling better.  He just wants to graduate
and go to college now.
     I saw Brad in detention the Monday after I saw him at the
park.  And he looked just like he always looks.
     Love always,
     Charlie
   
May 27, 1992
Dear friend,
     I've been reading The Fountainhead for the past few days, and
it's an excellent book.  I read on the back cover that the author
was born in Russia and came to America when she was young.
She barely spoke English, but she wanted to be a great writer.  I
thought that was very admirable, so I sat down and tried to write
a story.
     "Ian MacArthur is a wonderful sweet fellow who wears glasses
and peers out of them with delight."
     That was the first sentence.  The problem was that I just
couldn't think of the next one.  After cleaning my room three
times, I decided to leave Ian alone for a while because I was
starting to get mad at him.
     I've had a lot of time to write and read and think about things
this past week because everyone is busy with prom and
graduation and schedules.  Next Friday is their last day of school.
And then prom is on Tuesday, which I thought was strange
because I thought it would be on a weekend, but Sam told me
that every school can't have their prom on the same night or else
there wouldn't be enough tuxedos and restaurants to go around.  I
said it felt very well planned.  And then Sunday is their
graduation.  It all feels very exciting.  I wish it were happening to
me.
     I wonder what it will be like when I leave this place.  The fact
that I will have to have a roommate and buy shampoo.  I thought
how great it would be to go to my senior prom three years from
now with Sam.  I hope it's on a Friday.  And I hope I will be a
valedictorian at graduation.  I wonder what my speech would be.
And if Bill would help me with it if he didn't go to New York and
write plays.  Or maybe he would even if he was in New York
writing plays.  I think that would be especially nice of him.
     I don't know.  The Fountainhead is a very good book.  I hope I
am being a filter.
     Love always,
     Charlie
   
June 2, 1992
Dear friend,
     Did you have a senior prank? I'm guessing you probably did
because my sister said it's a tradition at a lot of schools.  This
year, the prank was as follows: Some seniors filled the swimming
pool with about six thousand packages of grape Kool-Aid.  I have
no idea who thinks of these things or why, except that the senior
prank is supposed to signify the end of school.  What this has to
do with a grape pool is beyond me, but I was very happy not to
have gym.
     It's actually been a very exciting time because we've all been
busy finishing up the year.  This Friday is the last day of school
for all of my friends and my sister.  They've been talking about
their prom nonstop.  Even the people that think it's a "joke" like
Mary Elizabeth can't stop talking about what a "joke" it is. It's all
very fun to witness.
     So, by this time, everyone has finally figured out which schools
he or she is going to next year.  Patrick is going to the University
of Washington because he wants to be near the music there.  He
says he thinks he wants to work for a record company someday.
Maybe be a publicist or a person who finds new bands.  Sam
finally made her decision to leave early for the summer program at
the college of her choice.  I love that expression.  College of my
choice.  Safety school is another favorite.
     The thing was that Sam got into two schools.  The college of
her choice and a safety school.  She could have started at the
safety school in the fall, but in order to go to the college of her
choice, she had to do this special summer program just like my
brother.  That's right! The school is Penn State, which is so great
because now I can visit my brother and Sam with one trip.  I don't
want to think about Sam leaving just yet, but I did wonder what
would happen if she and my brother ever started dating, which is
stupid because they are nothing alike, and Sam is in love with
Craig.  I have to stop doing this.
     My sister is going to a "small liberal arts college back East"
called Sarah Lawrence.  She almost didn't get to go because it
costs a lot of money, but then she got an academic scholarship
through the Rotary Club or Moose Lodge or something like that,
which I thought was very generous of them.  My sister is going to
be second in her class.  I thought she might have been
valedictorian, but she got a B when she was going through that
tough time with her old boyfriend.
     Mary Elizabeth is going to Berkeley.  And Alice is going to
study movies at New York University.  I never even knew she
liked movies, but I guess she does.  She calls them "films."
     Incidentally, I finished The Fountainhead.  It was a really great
experience.  It's strange to describe reading a book as a really
great experience, but that's kind of how it felt.  It was a different
book from the others because it wasn't about being a kid.  And it
wasn't like The Stranger or Naked Lunch even though I think it
was philosophical in a way.  But it wasn't like you had to really
search for the philosophy.  It was pretty straightforward, I
thought, and the great part is that I took what the author wrote
about and put it in terms of my own life.  Maybe that's what being
a filter means.  I'm not sure.
     There was this one part where the main character, who is this
architect, is sitting on a boat with his best friend, who is a
newspaper tycoon.  And the newspaper tycoon says that the
architect is a very cold man.  The architect replies that if the boat
were sinking, and there was only room in the lifeboat for one
person, he would gladly give up his life for the newspaper tycoon.
And then he says something like this ...
     "I would die for you.  But I won't live for you."
     Something like that.  I think the idea is that every person has
to live for his or her own life and then make the choice to share it
with other people.  Maybe that is what makes people
"participate." I'm not really certain.  Because I don't know if I
would mind living for Sam for a while.  Then again, she wouldn't
want me to, so maybe it's a lot friendlier than all that.  I hope so
anyway.
     I told my psychiatrist about the book and Bill and about Sam
and Patrick and all their colleges, but he just keeps asking me
questions about when I was younger.  The thing is I feel that I'm
just repeating the same memories to him.  I don't know.  He says
it's important.  I guess we'll have to see.
     I would write a little more today, but I have to learn my math
formulas for the final on Thursday.  Wish me luck!
     Love always,
     Charlie
   
June 5, 1992
Dear friend,
     I wanted to tell you about us running.  There was this
beautiful sunset.  And there was this hill.  The hill up to the
eighteenth green where Patrick and I spit wine from laughing.
And just a few hours before, Sam and Patrick and everyone I love
and know had their last day of high school ever.  And I was happy
because they were happy.  My sister even let me hug her in the
hallway.  Congratulations was the word of the day.  So, Sam and
Patrick and I went to the Big Boy and smoked cigarettes.  Then,
we went walking, waiting for it to be time to go to Rocky
Horror.  And we were talking about things that seemed
important at the time.  And we were looking up that hill.  And
then Patrick started running after the sunset.  And Sam
immediately followed him.  And I saw them in silhouette.
Running after the sun.  Then, I started running.  And everything
was as good as it could be.
     That night, Patrick decided to play Frank 'n Furter one last
time.  He was so happy to put on the costume, and everyone was
happy he decided to do it.  It was quite moving actually.  He gave
the best show I ever saw him give.  Maybe I was biased, but I
don't care.  It was the show I'll always remember.  Especially his
last song.
     The song is called "I'm Going Home." In the movie, Tim
Curry, who plays the character, cries during that song.  But
Patrick was smiling.  And it felt just right.
     I even persuaded my sister to come to the show with her
boyfriend.  I have been trying to get her to come since I started
going, but she never would.  But this time she did.  And since she
and her boyfriend never saw the show before, they were
technically "virgins," which meant they would have to do all these
embarrassing things before the show started to get "initiated." I
decided not to tell my sister this, and she and her boyfriend had to
go on stage and try to dance the Time Warp.
     Whoever lost the dance contest had to pretend he or she was
having sex with a large stuffed Gumby doll, so I quickly showed
my sister and her boyfriend how to dance the Time Warp, so they
wouldn't lose the contest.  It was fun watching my sister dance
the Time Warp on stage, but I don't think I could have handled
her pretending to have sex with a large stuffed Gumby.
     I asked my sister if she wanted to come to Craig's for the party
afterward, but she said that one of her friends was having a party,
so she was going to that.  That was okay with me because at least
she came to the show.  And before she left, she hugged me again.
Two in one day! I really do love my sister.  Especially when she's
nice.
     The party at Craig's was great.  Craig and Peter bought
champagne to congratulate all the people who were graduating.
And we danced.  And we talked.  And I saw Mary Elizabeth
kissing Peter and looking happy.  And I saw Sam kissing Craig
and looking happy.  And I saw Patrick and Alice not even care
that they weren't kissing anybody because they were too excited
talking about their futures.
     So, I just sat there with a bottle of champagne near the CD
player, and I changed the songs to fit the mood of what I saw.  I
was lucky, too, because Craig has an excellent collection.  When
people looked a little tired, I played something fun.  When they
looked like they wanted to talk, I played something soft.  It was a
great way to sit alone at a party and still feel a part of things.
     After the party, everyone thanked me because they said it was
the perfect music.  Craig said that I should be a deejay to make
money while I was still in school just like he does modeling.  I
thought that was a good idea.  Maybe I could save up a lot of
money, so I would be able to go to college even if something like
the Rotary Club or Moose Lodge didn't come through.
     My brother said recently on the phone that if he makes it to
the pros, I don't have to worry about my college money at all.  He
said he'd take care of it.  I can't wait to see my brother.  He's
coming home for my sister's graduation, which is so nice.
     Love always,
     Charlie
   
June 9, 1992
Dear friend,
     It is now prom night.  And I am sitting in my room.  Yesterday
was difficult because I didn't know anybody since all my friends
and my sister were no longer in school.
     The worst was lunchtime because it reminded me of when
everyone was angry with me for Mary Elizabeth.  I couldn't even
eat my sandwich, and my mom made my favorite because I think
she knew how sad I would be with everyone gone.
     The halls seemed different.  And the juniors were acting
different because they are now the seniors.  They even had
T-shirts made.  I don't know who plans these things.
     All I can think about is the fact that Sam is leaving in two
weeks to go to Penn State.  And Mary Elizabeth is going to be
busy with her guy.  And my sister is going to be busy with hers.
And Alice and I aren't that close.  I know Patrick will be around,
but I'm afraid that maybe since he isn't sad, he won't want to
spend time with me.  I know that's wrong in my head, but it feels
that way sometimes.  So, then the only person I would have to
talk to would be my psychiatrist, and I don't like the idea of that
right now because he keeps asking me questions about when I
was younger, and they're starting to get weird.
     I'm just lucky that I have so much schoolwork and don't have a
lot of time to think.
     All I hope is that tonight is great for the people whom it's
supposed to be great for.  My sister's boyfriend showed up in his
Buick, and he was wearing a white "tails" coat over a black suit,
which looked wrong for some reason. His "cumberbunn" (I don't
know how to spell this) matched my sister's dress, which was
powder blue and low-cut. It reminded me of those magazines.  I
have to stop spinning out like this.  Okay.
     All I hope is that my sister feels beautiful, and her new guy
makes her feel beautiful.  I hope that Craig doesn't make Sam feel
that her prom isn't special just because he's older.  I hope the same
for Mary Elizabeth with Peter.  I hope Brad and Patrick decide to
make up and dance in front of the whole school.  And that Alice
is secretly a lesbian and in love with Brad's girlfr Nancy (and vice
versa), so nobody feels left out.  I hope the deejay is as good as
everyone said I was last Friday.  And I hope everyone's pictures
turn out great and never become old photographs and nobody
gets in a car accident.
     That is what I really hope.
     Love always,
     Charlie
   
June 10, 1992
Dear friend,
     I just got home from school, and my sister is still asleep from
the after-prom party the school organized.  I called over to Patrick
and Sam's, but they're still asleep, too.  Patrick and Sam have a
cordless phone which always runs out of batteries, and Sam's
mom sounded like a mom in the Peanuts cartoons.  Wah Wah ...
Wuh.
     I had two finals today.  One in biology, which I think I got a
perfect in.  The other in Bill's class.  The final was about The
Great Gatsby.  The only thing hard about it was the fact that he
had me read the book so long ago, and it was difficult to
remember.
     After I handed in the final, I asked Bill if he wanted me to
write an essay about The Fountainhead, since I told him that I
had finished it, and he hadn't told me to do anything.  He said that
it wouldn't be fair to have me write another essay when I have so
many finals this week.  Instead, he invited me over to his town
house to spend Saturday afternoon with his girlfr and him, which
sounds like fun.
     So, on Friday, I will go to Rocky Horror.  Then, on Saturday, I
will go over to Bill's town house.  Then, on Sunday, I will watch
everyone graduate and spend time with my brother and all the
family because of my sister.  Then, I'll probably go to Sam and
Patrick's to celebrate their graduating.  Then, I'll have two more
days of school, which doesn't make sense because all my finals
will be over.  But they have some activities planned.  At least
that's what I've heard.
     The reason I am thinking so far in advance is because school is
terribly lonely.  I think I've said that before, but it's getting harder
every day.  I have two finals tomorrow.  History and typing.
Then, on Friday, I have finals in all my other classes like gym and
shop.  I don't know if there will be actual finals in these classes.
Especially shop.  I think Mr.  Callahan will just play some of his
old records for us.  He did that when we were supposed to have a
midterm, too, but it won't be the same without Patrick
lip-synching. Incidentally, I got a perfect on my math final last
week.
     Love always,
     Charlie
   
June 13, 1992
Dear friend,
     I just got home from Bill's house.  I would have written to you
about last night this morning, but I had to go to Bill's.
     Last night, Craig and Sam broke up.
     It was very sad to watch.  In the past few days, I have heard a
lot about the prom, and thanks to those twenty-four-hour film
places, I have seen what everyone looked like.  Sam looked
beautiful.  Patrick looked handsome.  Mary Elizabeth, Alice, Mary
Elizabeth's boyfriend all looked great, too.  The only thing is that
Alice wore white stick deodorant with a strapless dress, and it
showed.  I don't think that kind of thing matters, but supposedly
Alice was paranoid about it all night.  Craig looked handsome as
well, but he wore a suit instead of a tux.  That's not why they
broke up.
     Actually, the prom was supposed to be very nice.  The limo
was really great, and the limo driver got everyone stoned, which
made the very expensive food taste even better.  His name was
Billy.  The prom's music came from this really bad cover band
called The Gypsies of the Allegheny, but the drummer was good,
so everyone had a nice time dancing.  Patrick and Brad didn't
even look at each other, but Sam said Patrick was really okay
about it.
     After the prom, my sister and her boyfriend went to the
after-prom party the school organized.  It was at this popular
dance club downtown.  She said that it was really fun with
everyone all dressed up and dancing to good music played by a
deejay instead of The Gypsies of the Allegheny.  They even had a
comedian who did impersonations.  The only thing was that once
you went in, you couldn't leave and come back.  I guess the
parents thought that it would keep the kids out of trouble.  But
nobody seemed to mind.  They were having too much fun, and
enough people smuggled in liquor anyway.
     After the party, it was about seven o'clock in the morning and
everyone went to the Big Boy for pancakes or bacon.
     I asked Patrick how he liked the after-prom party, and he said
that it was a lot of fun.  He said that Craig had rented a hotel
suite for all of them, but only Craig and Sam went.  Actually, Sam
wanted to go to the after-prom party the school organized, too,
but Craig got really angry because he already paid for the hotel
suite.  That's not why they broke up.
     It happened yesterday at Craig's house after Rocky Horror.
Like I said, Mary Elizabeth's boyfriend, Peter, is good friends
with Craig, and he kind of stepped into the middle of things.  I
guess he really likes Mary Elizabeth a lot and has grown to like
Sam quite a bit because he's the one who brought it up.  Nobody
even suspected.
     Basically, Craig had been cheating on Sam ever since they
started going out.  And when I say cheat, I don't mean he got
drunk once and fooled around with one girl and felt bad about it.
There were several girls.  Several times.  Drunk and sober.  And I
guess he never felt bad.
     The reason Peter didn't say anything at first was the fact that
he didn't know anybody.  And he didn't know Sam.  He just
thought she was this dumb high school girl because that's what
Craig always told him.
     Anyway, after he got to know Sam, Peter kept telling Craig
that Craig had to tell her the truth because she wasn't just some
dumb high school girl.  Craig kept promising he would, but he
never did it.  There was always some excuse.  Craig called them
"reasons."
     "I don't want to ruin the prom for her."
     "I don't want to ruin graduation for her."
     "I don't want to ruin the show for her."
     Then, finally, Craig said there was no point telling her
anything at all.  She was about to go away to college anyway.
She would find a new guy.  He was always "safe" about other
girls.  There was nothing to worry about in that way.  And why
not just let Sam remember the whole experience in a good way?
Because he really liked Sam and didn't want to hurt her feelings.
     Peter went along with this logic even though he thought it
was wrong.  At least that's what he said.  But then after the show
yesterday, Craig told him that he fooled around with yet another
girl the afternoon of the prom. That's when Peter told Craig that
if Craig didn't say something to Sam, he would.  Well, Craig
didn't say anything, and Peter still didn't think it was his business,
but then he overheard Sam at the party.  She was talking to Mary
Elizabeth about how Craig might be "the one" and how she was
trying to think of ways to keep it going long-.tance while she was
at school.  Letters.  Phone calls.  Vacations.  And breaks.  That
was it for Peter.
     He went up to Craig and said, "You tell her something now, or
I tell her everything."
     So, Craig pulled Sam into his bedroom.  They were in there for
a while.  Then, Sam walked from the bedroom straight out the
front door, silently sobbing.  Craig didn't run after her.  That was
probably the worst part.  Not that he should have tried to get
back together with her, but I think he should have run after her
anyway.
     All I know is that Sam was devastated.  Mary Elizabeth and
Alice went after her to make sure she was okay.  I would have
gone, too, but Patrick grabbed my arm to stay.  He wanted to
know what was going on, I guess, or maybe he figured Sam
would be better off with female company.
     I'm glad that we stayed, though, because I think our presence
prevented a pretty violent fight between Craig and Peter.
Because we were there, all they really did was scream at each
other.  That's where I heard most of the details I'm writing to you
about.
     Craig would say, "Fuck you, Peter! Fuck you!"
     And Peter would say, "Don't blame me that you fucked around
on her since the beginning! The afternoon of her prom!? You're
just a bastard! You hear me?! A fucking bastard!"
     Things like that.
     When it looked like things were going to get violent, Patrick
stepped between the two and, with my help, got Peter out of the
apartment.  When we got outside, the girls were gone.  So,
Patrick and I got into Patrick's car and drove Peter home.  He was
still seething, so he "vented" about Craig.  That's where I heard
the rest of the details I'm writing to you about.  Finally, we
dropped Peter off, and he made us promise to make sure Mary
Elizabeth didn't think he was cheating on her because he wasn't.
He just didn't want to be found "guilty by association" with that
"prick."
     We promised, and he went into his apartment building.
     Patrick and I weren't sure how much Craig actually told Sam.
We both hoped he gave her a "soft" version of the truth.  Enough
to make her stay away.  But not enough to make her doubt
everything about everything.  Maybe it's better to know the whole
truth.  I honestly don't know.
     So, we just made a pact that we wouldn't tell her unless we
found out that Craig made it sound like "nothing big," and Sam
was ready to forgive him.  I hope it doesn't come to that.  I hope
Craig told her enough to make her stay away.
     We drove around to all the places where we thought we might
find the girls, but we couldn't find them.  Patrick figured they
were probably just driving around, trying to let Sam "cool off a
bit."
     So, Patrick dropped me at home.  He said he'd call me
tomorrow when he heard anything.
     I remember going to sleep last night, and I realized something.
Something that I think is important.  I realized that throughout
the course of the evening, I wasn't happy about Craig and Sam
breaking up.  Not at all.
     I never once thought that it would mean Sam might start
liking me.  All I cared about was the fact that Sam got really hurt.
And I guess I realized at that moment that I really did love her.
Because there was nothing to gain, and that didn't matter.
     It was hard walking up the steps to Bill's town house that
afternoon because I didn't receive a phone call all morning from
Patrick.  And I was so worried about Sam.  I called on the phone,
but nobody was there.
     Bill looks different without a suit.  He was wearing his old
graduate school T-shirt.  Which was Brown.  The school.  Not
the color.  His girlfr was wearing sandals and a nice flowered
dress.  She even had hair under her arms.  No kidding! They
looked very happy together.  And I was glad for Bill.
     Their house didn't have a lot of furniture in it, but it was very
comfortable.  They had a lot of books, which I spent about a half
an hour asking them about.  There was also a picture of Bill and
his girlfr when they were at Brown together in graduate school.
Bill had very long hair then.
     Bill's girlfr made lunch while Bill made the salad.  I just sat in
the kitchen, drinking a ginger ale, and watching them.  The lunch
was a spaghetti dish of some sort because Bill's girlfr doesn't eat
meat.  Bill doesn't eat meat either now.  The salad did have
imitation bacon bits, though, because bacon is the only thing they
both miss.
     They had a really nice collection of jazz records, and they kept
playing them all through lunch.  After a while, they broke open a
bottle of white wine and gave me another ginger ale.  Then, we
started talking.
     Bill asked me about The Fountainhead, and I told him, making
sure that I was a filter.
     Then, he asked me about how I liked my first year of high
school, and I told him, making sure that I included all the stories
in which I "participated."
     Then, he asked me about girls, and I told him how I really
loved Sam, and how I wondered what the lady who wrote The
Fountainhead would say about how I came to realize that I loved
her.
     After I finished, Bill got very quiet.  He cleared his throat.
     "Charlie ...  I want to thank you."
     "Why?" I said.
     "Because it has been a wonderful experience teaching you."
     "Oh ...  I'm glad." I didn't know what else to say.
     Then, Bill took this really long pause, and his voice sounded
like my dad when he wants to have a big talk.
     "Charlie," he said.  "Do you know why I gave you all that extra
work?"
     I shook my head no.  That look on his face.  It made me quiet.
     "Charlie, do you know how smart you are?"
     I just shook my head no again.  He was talking for real.  It was
strange.
     "Charlie, you're one of the most gifted people I've ever known.
 And I don't mean in terms of my other students.  I mean in terms
of anyone I've ever met.  That's why I gave you the extra work.  I
was wondering if you were aware of that?"
     "I guess so.  I don't know." I felt really strange.  I didn't know
where this was coming from.  I just wrote some essays.
     "Charlie.  Please don't take this the wrong way.  I'm not trying
to make you feel uncomfortable.  I just want you to know that
you're very special ...  and the only reason I'm telling you is that I
don't know if anyone else ever has."
     I looked up at him.  And then I didn't feel strange.  I felt like I
wanted to cry.  He was being so nice to me, and the way his girlfr
looked, I knew that this meant a lot to him.  And I didn't know
why it did.
     "So, when the school year ends, and I'm not your teacher
anymore, I want you to know that if you ever need anything, or
want to know about more books, or want to show me anything
you write, or anything, you can always come to me as a friend.  I
do consider you a friend, Charlie."
     I started crying a little bit.  I actually think his girlfr was, too.
But Bill wasn't.  He looked very solid.  I just remember wanting
to hug him.  But I've never done that before, and I guess Patrick
and girls and family don't count.  I didn't say anything for a while
because I didn't know what to say.
     So, finally I just said, "You're the best teacher I ever had."
     And he said, "Thank you."
     And that was that.  Bill didn't try to make sure that I would
see him next year if I needed anything.  He didn't ask me why I
was crying.  He just let me hear what he had to say in my own
way and let things be.  That was probably the best part.
     After a few minutes, it was time for me to leave.  I don't know
who decides these things.  It just happens.
     So, we went to the door, and Bill's girlfr hugged me good-bye,
which was very nice considering I didn't know her except for
today.  Then, Bill extended his hand, and I took it.  And we
shook hands.  And I even sneaked in a quick hug before I said
"good-bye."
     When I was driving home, I just thought about the word
"special." And I thought the last person who said that about me
was my aunt Helen.  I was very grateful to have heard it again.
Because I guess we all forget sometimes.  And I think everyone is
special in their own way.  I really do.
     My brother gets home tonight.  And everyone's graduation is
tomorrow.  Patrick still hasn't called.  I called him, but no one was
home again.  So, I decided to go out and buy everyone their
graduation presents.  I really haven't had time to do that until
now.
     Love always,
     Charlie
   
June 16, 1992
Dear friend,
     I just rode home on the bus.  It was the last day of school for
me today.  And it was raining.  When I do ride the bus, I usually
sit toward the middle because I've heard sitting in the front is for
nerds and sitting in the back is for squids, and the whole thing
makes me nervous.  I don't know what they call "squids" in other
schools.
     Anyway, today I decided to sit in the front with my legs over
the whole seat.  Kind of like I was lying down with my back to
the window.  I did this so I could look back at the other kids on
the bus.  I'm glad school buses don't have seat belts, or else I
wouldn't have been able to do it.
     The one thing I noticed was how different everyone looked.
When we were all little, we used to sing songs on the bus ride
home from the last day of school.  The favorite song was a Pink
Floyd song, I found out later, called Another Brick in the Wall,
Part II.  But there was this other song we loved even more
because it ended with a swear.  It went like this ...
     No more pencils ar no more books ar no more teachers' dirty
looks ar when the teacher rings the bell ar drop your books and
run like hell.
     When we finished, we looked at the bus driver for a tense
second.  Then, we all laughed because we knew we could get in
trouble for swearing, but the strength of our numbers would
prevent any retribution.  We were too young to know that the bus
driver didn't care about our song.  That all he wanted to do was
go home after work.  And maybe sleep off the drinks he had at
lunch.  Back then, it didn't matter.  The nerds and the squids were
one.
     My brother came home Saturday night.  And he looked even
more different than the kids on the school bus looked compared
to the beginning of the year.  He had a beard! I was so happy! He
also smiled different and was more "courteous." We all sat down
to dinner, and everyone asked him questions about college.  Dad
asked about football.  Mom asked about classes.  I asked for all
the fun stories.  My sister asked nervous questions about what
college is "really" like and would she put on the "freshman
fifteen"? I don't know what this is, but I'm guessing it means you
get fatter.
     I was expecting my brother to just talk and talk about himself
for a long time.  He would do that whenever there was a big
game in high school or the prom or something.  But he seemed a
lot more interested in what we were all doing, especially my sister
with her graduation.
     So, while they were talking, I suddenly remembered the TV
news sports man and what he said about my brother.  I got so
excited.  And I told my whole family.  And this is what happened
as a result.
     My dad said, "Hey! How about that?!"
     My brother said, "Really!?"
     I said, "Yeah.  I talked to him."
     My brother said, "Did he say something good?"
     My father said, "Any press is good press." I don't know where
my father learns these things.
     My brother kept going.  "What did he say?"
     I said, "Well, I think he said that college sports puts a lot of
pressure on the students who do them." My brother kept nodding.
 "But he said that it built character.  And he said that Penn State
was looking really good with their recruitment.  And he
mentioned you."
     My dad said, "Hey! How about that?"
     My brother said, "Really?"
     I said, "Yeah.  I talked to him."
     My brother said, "When did you talk to him?"
     I said, "A couple weeks ago."
     And then I froze because I suddenly remembered the other
part.  The fact that I met the man in the park at night.  And the
fact that I gave him one of my cigarettes.  And the fact that he
was trying to pick me up.  I just sat there, hoping it would go
away.  But it didn't.
     "Where did you meet him, honey?" my mom asked.
     The room turned pins and needles quiet.  And I did my best
impersonation of myself when I can't remember something.  And
here's what's going on inside my head.
     Okay ...  he came to school to have a talk with the class ...  no
...  my sister would know it was a lie ...  I met him at the Big Boy ...
 he was with his family ...  no ...  my dad would scold me for
bothering the "poor man" ...  he said it on a news cast ...  but I
said I talked to him ...  wait ...
     "In the park.  I was there with Patrick," I said.
     My dad said, "Was he there with his family? Did you bother
the poor man?"
     "No.  He was alone."
     That was enough for my dad and everybody else, and I didn't
even have to lie.  Luckily, the attention was turned off me when
my mother said what she likes to say when we're all together
celebrating something.
     "Who's in the mood for ice cream?"
     Everyone was except for my sister.  I think she was worried
about the "freshman fifteen."
     The next morning started early.  I still hadn't heard from
Patrick or Sam or anybody, but I knew I would see them at
graduation, so I tried not to worry too much.  All my relatives,
including my dad's family from Ohio, came to the house around
ten A.M.  The two families really don't like each other, except for
all us younger cousins because we don't know any better.
     We had this big brunch with champagne, and just like last year
for my brother's graduation, my mom gave her dad (my
grandfather) sparkling apple juice instead of champagne because
she didn't want him to get drunk and make a scene.  And he said
the same thing he said last year.
     "This is good champagne."
     I don't think he knew the difference because he's a beer
drinker.  Sometimes, whiskey.
     Around twelve-thirty, brunch was over.  All the cousins drove
all the cars because the adults were still a little too drunk to drive
to the graduation.  Except for my dad, because he was too busy
videotaping everyone with a camera he rented from the video
store.
     "Why buy a camera when you only need it three times a year?"
     So, my sister, brother, dad, mom, and I each had to go in a
different car to make sure nobody got lost.  I went with all my
Ohio cousins, who promptly pulled out a "joint" and passed it
around.  I didn't smoke any of it because I wasn't in the mood,
and they said what they always say.
     "Charlie, you're such a pussy."
     So, all the cars pulled into the parking lot, and we all got out.
And my sister yelled at my cousin Mike for rolling down the
window while he was driving and messing up her hair.
     "I was smoking a cigarette," was his reply.
     "Couldn't you wait ten minutes?" was my sister's.
     "But it was a great song," was his final word.
     So, as my dad was getting the video camera out of the trunk,
and my brother was talking to some of the graduating girls who
were a year older and "looking good," my sister went for my mom
to get my mom's purse.  The great thing about my mom's purse is
that no matter what you need at any given moment, she has it.
When I was little, I used to call it the "first-aid kit" because that's
all we needed back then.  I still can't figure out how she does it.
     After primping, my sister followed the trail of graduation caps
to the field, and we all found our way to the bleachers.  I sat in
between my mom and brother since my dad was off getting a
better camera angle.  And my mom kept shushing my grandfather,
who kept talking about how many black people  were in the
school.
     When she couldn't stop him, she mentioned my story about the
TV news sports man talking about my brother. This made my
grandfather call my brother over to talk about it.  This was smart
on my mom's part because my brother is the only person who can
get my grandfather to stop making a scene because he's really
direct about it.  After the story, this is what happened ...
     "Jesus.  Look at these bleachers.  How many colored people--"
My brother cut him off.
     "Okay, Grandpa.  Here's the deal.  If you embarrass us one
more time, I'm going to drive you back to the nursing home, and
you'll never see your granddaughter give a speech." My brother is
real tough.
     "But then you won't see the speech either, big shot." My
grandfather's real tough, too.
     "Yeah, but my dad is videotaping it.  And I can arrange it so I
get to see the tape, and you don't.  Can't I?"
     My grandfather has a really weird smile.  Especially when
someone else wins.  He didn't say anything more about it.  He just
started talking about football and didn't even mention anything
about my brother playing on a team with black kids.  I can't tell
you how bad it was last year since my brother was on the field
graduating instead of up in the bleachers making my grandfather
stop.
     While they were talking football, I kept looking for Patrick and
Sam, but all I saw were those graduation caps in the distance.
When the music started, the caps started marching toward the
folding chairs set up on the field.  That's when I finally saw Sam
walking behind Patrick.  I was so relieved.  I couldn't really tell if
she was happy or sad, but it was enough just to see her and know
that she was there.
     When all the kids got in the chairs, the music stopped.  And
Mr.  Small got up and gave a speech about what a wonderful
class this was.  He mentioned some of the achievements the
school had made, and he emphasized how much they needed
support at the Community Day Bake Sale to start a new computer
lab.  Then, he introduced the class president, who gave a speech.
I don't know what class presidents do, but the girl gave a very
good speech.
     Then, it was time for the five top honor students to give a
speech.  That's the tradition in the school.  My sister was second
in her class, so she gave the fourth speech.  The valedictorian is
always last.  Then, Mr.  Small and the vice principal, whom
Patrick swears is gay, hand out the diplomas.
     The first three speeches were very similar.  They all had quotes
from pop songs that had something to do with the future.  And all
through the speeches, I could see my mother's hands.  She was
gripping them tighter and tighter together.
     When they announced my sister's name, my mom uncoiled into
applause.  It was really great watching my sister get on the
podium because my brother was something like 223rd in his class
and consequently didn't get to give a speech.  And maybe I'm
biased, but when my sister quoted a pop song and talked about
the future, it seemed great. I looked over at my brother, and he
looked over at me.  And we both smiled.  Then, we looked at my
mother, and she was crying real soft and messy, so my brother and
I each took one of her hands.  She looked at us and smiled and
cried harder.  Then, we both rested our heads on her shoulders,
like a sideways hug, which made her cry even harder. Or maybe it
let her cry even harder.  I'm not sure which.  But she gave our
hands a little squeeze and said, "My boys," real soft, and went
back to crying.  I love my mom so much.  I don't care if that's
corny to say.  I think on my next birthday, I'm going to buy her a
present.  I think that should be the tradition.  The kid gets gifts
from everybody, and he buys one present for his mom since she
was there, too.  I think that would be nice.
     When my sister finished her speech, we all clapped and yelled,
but nobody clapped or yelled louder than my grandfather.
Nobody.
     I don't remember what the valedictorian said except that she
quoted Henry David Thoreau instead of a pop song.
     Then, Mr.  Small got up on the stage and asked everyone to
refrain from applause until all the names were read and all the
diplomas were handed out.  I should mention that this didn't work
last year either.
     So, I saw my sister get her diploma and my mother cry again.
And then I saw Mary Elizabeth.  And I saw Alice.  And I saw
Patrick.  And I saw Sam.  It was a great day.  Even when I saw
Brad.  It seemed okay.
     We all met my sister in the parking lot, and the first one to hug
her was my grandfather.  He really is a proud man in his way.
Everyone said how much they loved my sister's speech even if
they didn't.  Then, we all saw my father walking across the
parking lot, holding the video camera above his head
triumphantly.  I don't think anybody hugged my sister longer than
my dad.  I looked around for Sam and Patrick, but I couldn't find
them anywhere.
     On the way home for the party, my Ohio cousins lit up another
joint.  This time, I took a hit, but they still called me a "pussy." I
don't know why.  Maybe that's just what Ohio cousins do.  That
and tell jokes.
     "What has 32 legs and 1 tooth?"
     "What?" we all asked.
     "A West Virginia unemployment line."
     Things like that.
     When we got home, my Ohio cousins went straight for the bar
because graduations seem to be the one occasion where anyone
can drink.  At least it was like that last year and this year.  I
wonder what my graduation will be like.  It seems very far away.
     So, my sister spent the first hour of the party opening up all
the gifts, and her smile grew with each check, sweater, or fifty
dollar bill.  Nobody in our family is rich, but it seems like
everybody saves up just enough for these kind of events, and we
all pretend we're rich for a day.
     The only people who didn't get my sister money or a sweater
were my brother and I.  My brother promised to take her out one
day to shop for college things like soap, which he would pay for,
and I bought her a little house that was hand-carved out of stone
and painted in England.  I told her I wanted to give her something
that makes her feel like she's at home even after she goes away.
My sister actually kissed my cheek for that.
     But the best part of the party happened when my mother came
to me and said I had a phone call.  I went to the phone.
     "Hello?"
     "Charlie?"
     "Sam!"
     "When are you coming over?" she asked.    "Now!" I said.
     Then, my father, who was drinking a whiskey sour, growled,
"You're not going anywhere until your relatives leave.  You hear
me?"
     "Uh, Sam ...  I have to wait for my relatives to leave," I said.
     "Okay ...  we'll be here until seven.  Then, we'll call you from
wherever we are." Sam really sounded happy.
     "Okay, Sam.  Congratulations!"
     "Thanks, Charlie.  Bye."
     "Bye."
     I hung up the phone.
     I swear to you, I thought my relatives would never leave.
Every story they told.  Every pig in a blanket they ate.  Every
photograph they looked at, and every time I heard "when you
were this high" with the appropriate gesture.  It was like the clock
stopped.  It's not that I minded the stories because I didn't.  And
the pigs in blankets were quite good.  But I wanted to see Sam.
     At about 9:30, everyone was stuffed and sober.  At 9:45, the
hugs were over.  At 9:50, the driveway was clear.  My father gave
me twenty dollars and the keys to his car, saying, "Thanks for
sticking around.  It meant a lot to me and the family." He was
tipsy, but meant it just the same.  Sam had told me they were
going to a dance club downtown.  So, I loaded everyone's gifts in
my trunk, climbed in the car, and drove away.
     There's something about that tunnel that leads to downtown.
It's glorious at night.  Just glorious.  You start on one side of the
mountain, and it's dark, and the radio is loud.  As you enter the
tunnel, the wind gets sucked away, and you squint from the lights
overhead.  When you adjust to the lights, you can see the other
side in the distance just as the sound of the radio fades to nothing
because the waves just can't reach.  Then, you're in the middle of
the tunnel, and everything becomes a calm dream.  As you see the
opening get closer, you just can't get there fast enough.  And
finally, just when you think you'll never get there, you see the
opening right in front of you.  And the radio comes back even
louder than you remember it.  And the wind is waiting.  And you
fly out of the tunnel onto the bridge.  And there it is.  The city.  A
million lights and buildings and everything seems as exciting as
the first time you saw it.  It really is a grand entrance.
     After about half an hour looking around the dance club, I
finally saw Mary Elizabeth with Peter.  They were both drinking
scotch and sodas, which Peter bought since he is older and had
his hand stamped.  I congratulated Mary Elizabeth and asked
where everybody was.  She told me that Alice was getting high in
the ladies' room and Sam and Patrick were on the floor dancing.
She said to just have a seat until they come back because she
didn't know where they were specifically.  So, I sat down and
listened to Peter argue with Mary Elizabeth about the Democratic
candidates.  Again, the clock seemed to stop.  I wanted to see
Sam that badly.
     After about three songs, Sam and Patrick came back
completely coated in sweat.
     "Charlie!"
     I stood up, and we all hugged like we hadn't seen each other in
months.  Considering everything that happened, I guess that
makes sense.  After we let go, Patrick lay on top of Peter and
Mary Elizabeth like they were a sofa.  Then, he took Mary
Elizabeth's drink out of her hand and drank it.  "Hey, asshole" was
her response.  I think he was drunk, even though he hasn't been
drinking lately, but Patrick does that stuff sober, so it's hard to
tell.
     That's when Sam grabbed my hand.  "I love this song!"
     She led me to the dance floor.  And she started dancing.  And I
started dancing.  It was a fast song, so I wasn't very good, but she
didn't seem to mind.  We were just dancing, and that was enough.
 The song ended, and then a slow one came on.  She looked at
me.  I looked at her.  Then, she took my hands and pulled me in
to dance slow.  I don't know how to dance slow very well either,
but I do know how to sway.
     Her whisper smelled like cranberry juice and vodka.
     "I looked for you in the parking lot today."
     I hoped mine still smelled like toothpaste.
     "I was looking for you, too."
     Then, we were quiet for the rest of the song.  She held me a
little closer.  I held her a little closer.  And we kept dancing.  It
was the one time all day that I really wanted the clock to stop.
And just be there for a long time.
     After the dance club, we went back to Peter's apartment, and I
gave everyone their graduation presents.  I gave Alice a film book
about Night of the Living Dead, which she liked, and I gave Mary
Elizabeth a copy of My Life as a Dog on videotape with the
subtitles in it, which she loved.
     Then, I gave Patrick and Sam their presents.  I even wrapped
them up special.  I used the Sunday funny papers because they are
in color.  Patrick tore through his.  Sam didn't rip any of the
paper.  She just plucked off the tape.  And they looked at what
was inside each box.
     I gave Patrick On the Road, Naked Lunch, The Stranger, This
Side of Paradise, Peter Pan, and A Separate Peace.
     I gave Sam To Kill a Mockingbird, The Catcher in the Rye,
The Great Gatsby, Hamlet, Walden, and The Fountainhead.
     Under the books was a card that I wrote using the typewriter
Sam bought me.  The cards said that these were my copies of all
my favorite books, and I wanted Sam and Patrick to have them
because they were my two favorite people in the whole world.
     When they both looked up from reading, they were quiet.
Nobody smiled or cried or did anything.  We were just open,
looking at each other.  They knew I meant the cards I wrote.  And
I knew it meant a lot to them.
     "What do the cards say?" Mary Elizabeth asked.
     "Do you mind, Charlie?" Patrick asked.
     I shook my head no, and they each read their cards while I
went to fill up my coffee cup with red wine.
     When I came back, they all looked at me, and I said, "I'm
going to miss you all very much.  I hope you have a great time at
college." And then I started crying because it suddenly hit me that
they were all leaving.  I think Peter thinks I'm a little strange.  So,
Sam stood up and took me into the kitchen, telling me on the way
there that it was "okay." When we got to the kitchen, I was a
little more calm.
     Sam said, "You know I'm leaving in a week, Charlie?"
     "Yeah.  I know."
     "Don't start crying again."
     "Okay."
     "I want you to listen."
     "Okay."
     "I'm really scared to be alone at college."
     "You are?" I asked.  I never really thought of that before.
     "Just like you're really scared to be alone here."
     "Okay." I nodded.
     "So, I'll make you a deal.  When things get to be too much at
college, I'll call you, and when things get to be too much here,
you call me."
     "Could we write letters back and forth?"
     "Of course," she said.
     Then, I started crying again.  I really am a roller-coaster
sometimes.  But Sam was patient.
     "Charlie, I'm going to be back at the end of the summer, but
before we think about that, let's just enjoy this last week together.
 All of us.  Okay?"
     I nodded and calmed down.
     We spent the rest of the night just drinking and listening to
music like we always did, but this time it was at Peter's, and it
was better than Craig's, actually, because Peter has a better music
collection.  It was about one o'clock in the morning when it
suddenly occurred to me.
     "Oh my God!" I said.
     "What's wrong, Charlie?"
     "Tomorrow's a school day!"
     I don't think I could have made them laugh harder.
     Peter took me into the kitchen to make coffee, so I could sober
up to drive home.  I had about eight cups in a row and was ready
to drive in about twenty minutes.  The problem was, by the time I
got home, I was so awake from the coffee, I couldn't fall asleep.
By the time I got to school, I felt like dying.  Luckily, all the finals
were over, and all we did all day was watch film strips.  I don't
think I ever slept better.  I was glad, too, because school really is
lonely without them.
     Today was different because I didn't sleep, and I didn't get to
see Sam or Patrick last night because they were having a special
dinner out with their parents.  And my brother was on a date with
one of the girls who was "looking good" at graduation.  My sister
was busy with her boyfriend.  And my mom and dad were still
tired from the graduation party.
     Today, pretty much every teacher just let the kids sit around
and talk after we handed in our textbooks.  I honestly didn't know
anybody, except maybe for Susan, but after that time in the
hallway, she's avoided me more than ever.  So, I didn't really talk.
The only good class was Bill's because I got to talk to Bill.  It was
hard saying good-bye to him after class was over, but he said that
it wasn't good-bye.  I could call him anytime over the summer if I
wanted to talk or borrow books, and that made me feel a little
better.
     This one kid with crooked teeth named Leonard called me a
"teacher's pet" in the hallway after Bill's class, but I didn't mind
because I think he missed the point somewhere.
     I ate lunch outside on a bench where we all used to smoke.
After I ate my Ho-Ho, I lit up a cigarette, and I was kind of
hoping someone would ask me for one, but no one did.
     When the last class was over, everyone was cheering and
making plans with each other for the summer.  And everyone was
clearing out their lockers by throwing their old papers and notes
and books on the hallway floor. When I got to my locker, I saw
this skinny kid who had the locker next to me all year.  I had
never really talked to him before.
     I cleared my throat and said, "Hey.  My name is Charlie."
     All he said was, "I know."
     Then, he closed his locker door and walked away.
     So, I just opened my locker, put all my old papers and things in
my backpack, and walked over the debris of books and papers
and notes in the hallway to the parking lot outside.  Then, I got
on the bus.  Then, I wrote this letter to you.
     I'm actually really glad that the school year is over.  I want to
spend a lot of time with everyone before they leave.  Especially
Sam.
     By the way, I ended up getting straight A's this whole year.
My mother was very proud and put my report card on the
refrigerator.
     Love always,
     Charlie
   
June 22, 1992
Dear friend,
     The night before Sam was going to leave made the whole
week a blur.  Sam was frantic because not only did she need to
spend time with us, but she had to get ready to go.  Buying
things.  Packing things.  Things like that.
     Every night, we would all get together after Sam had just said
good-bye to some uncle or had another lunch with her mom or
had done more shopping for school things.  She was scared, and it
wasn't until she had a sip of whatever we were drinking or a hit
off of whatever we were smoking that she would calm down and
be the same Sam.
     The one thing that really helped Sam through her week was
her lunch with Craig.  She said she wanted to see him to have
some kind of "closure," and I guess she was lucky enough to get it
because Craig was nice enough to tell her that she was right to
break up with him.  And that she was a special person.  And that
he was sorry and wished her well.  It's strange the times people
choose to be generous.
     The best part was that Sam said she didn't ask him about the
girls he might be dating even though she wanted to know.  She
wasn't bitter.  She was sad, though.  But it was a hopeful kind of
sad.  The kind of sad that just takes time.
     On the night before she left, we were all there at Sam and
Patrick's house.  Bob, Alice, Mary Elizabeth (without Peter), and
I.  We just sat on the rug in the "games" room, remembering
things.
     Remember the show where Patrick did this ...  or remember
when Bob did this ...  or Charlie ...  or Mary Elizabeth ...  or Alice
...  or Sam ...
     The inside jokes weren't jokes anymore.  They had become
stories.  Nobody brought up the bad names or the bad times.  And
nobody felt sad as long as we could postpone tomorrow with
more nostalgia.
     After a while, Mary Elizabeth and Bob and Alice left, saying
they would be back in the morning to see Sam off.  So, it was just
me, Patrick, and Sam.  Just sitting there.  Not saying much.  Until
we started our own remember when.
     Remember when Charlie first came to us at the football game
...  and remember when Charlie let the air out of Dave's tires at
the homecoming dance ...  and remember the poem ...  and the
mix tape ...  and Punk Rocky in color ...  and remember when we
all felt infinite ...
     After I said that, we all got quiet and sad.  In the silence, I
remembered this one time that I never told anybody about.  The
time we were walking.  Just the three of us.  And I was in the
middle.  I don't remember where we were walking to or where we
were walking from.  I don't even remember the season.  I just
remember walking between them and feeling for the first time
that I belonged somewhere.
     Finally, Patrick stood up.
     "I'm tired, guys.  Good night."
     Then, he messed up our hair and went up to his room.  Sam
turned to me.
     "Charlie, I have to pack up some things.  Would you stay with
me for a while?"
     I nodded, and we went upstairs.
     As we entered her room, I noticed how different it looked from
the night Sam kissed me.  The pictures were down, and the
dressers were empty, and everything was in a big pile on the bed.
I said to myself that I would not cry no matter what because I
didn't want to make Sam feel any more panicked than she already
was.
     So, I just watched her pack, and I tried to notice as many
details as I possibly could.  Her long hair and her thin wrists and
her green eyes.  I wanted to remember everything.  Especially the
sound of her voice.
     Sam talked about a lot of things, trying to keep herself
distracted.  She talked about what a long drive they had
tomorrow and how her parents had rented a van.  She wondered
what her classes would be like and what her eventual "major"
would be.  She said she didn't want to join a sorority but was
looking forward to the football games.  She was just getting more
and more sad.  Finally, she turned around.
     "Why didn't you ask me out when the whole Craig thing
happened?"
     I just sat there.  I didn't know what to say.  She said it soft.
     "Charlie ...  after that thing with Mary Elizabeth at the party
and us dancing at the club and everything ..."
     I didn't know what to say.  Honestly, I was lost.
     "Okay, Charlie ...  I'll make this easy.  When that whole thing
with Craig happened, what did you think?" She really wanted to
know.
     I said, "Well, I thought a lot of things.  But mostly, I thought
that your being sad was much more important to me than Craig
not being your boyfriend anymore. And if it meant that I would
never get to think of you that way, as long as you were happy, it
was okay.  That's when I realized that I really loved you."
     She sat down on the floor with me.  She spoke quiet.
     "Charlie, don't you get it? I can't feel that.  It's sweet and
everything, but it's like you're not even there sometimes.  It's great
that you can listen and be a shoulder to someone, but what about
when someone doesn't need a shoulder.  What if they need the
arms or something like that? You can't just sit there and put
everybody's lives ahead of yours and think that counts as love.
You just can't.  You have to do things."
     "Like what?" I asked.  My mouth was dry.
     "I don't know.  Like take their hands when the slow song
comes up for a change.  Or be the one who asks someone for a
date.  Or tell people what you need.  Or what you want.  Like on
the dance floor, did you want to kiss me?"
     "Yeah," I said.
     "Then, why didn't you?" she asked real serious.
     "Because I didn't think you wanted me to."
     "Why did you think that?"
     "Because of what you said."
     "What I said nine months ago? When I told you not to think of
me that way?"
     I nodded.
     "Charlie, I also told you not to tell Mary Elizabeth she was
pretty.  And to ask her a lot of questions and not interrupt her.
Now she's with a guy who does the exact opposite.  And it works
because that's who Peter really is.  He's being himself.  And he
does things."
     "But I didn't like Mary Elizabeth."
     "Charlie, you're missing the point.  The point is that I don't
think you would have acted different even if you did like Mary
Elizabeth.  It's like you can come to Patrick's rescue and hurt two
guys that are trying to hurt him, but what about when Patrick's
hurting himself? Like when you guys went to that park? Or when
he was kissing you? Did you want him to kiss you?"
     I shook my head no.
     "So, why did you let him?"
     "I was just trying to be a friend," I said.
     "But you weren't, Charlie.  At those times, you weren't being
his friend at all.  Because you weren't honest with him."
     I sat there very still.  I looked at the floor.  I didn't say
anything.  Very uncomfortable.
     "Charlie, I told you not to think of me that way nine months
ago because of what I'm saying now.  Not because of Craig.  Not
because I didn't think you were great.  It's just that I don't want to
be somebody's crush.  If somebody likes me, I want them to like
the real me, not what they think I am.  And I don't want them to
carry it around inside.  I want them to show me, so I can feel it,
too.  I want them to be able to do whatever they want around me.
 And if they do something I don't like, I'll tell them."
     She was starting to cry a little.  But she wasn't sad.
     "You know I blamed Craig for not letting me do things? You
know how stupid I feel about that now? Maybe he didn't really
encourage me to do things, but he didn't prevent me from doing
them either.  But after a while, I didn't do things because I didn't
want him to think different about me.  But the thing is, I wasn't
being honest.  So, why would I care whether or not he loved me
when he didn't really even know me?"
     I looked up at her.  She had stopped crying.
     "So, tomorrow, I'm leaving.  And I'm not going to let that
happen again with anyone else.  I'm going to do what I want to
do.  I'm going to be who I really am.  And I'm going to figure out
what that is.  But right now I'm here with you.  And I want to
know where you are, what you need, and what you want to do."
     She waited patiently for my answer.  But after everything she
said, I figured that I should just do what I wanted to do.  Not
think about it.  Not say it out loud.  And if she didn't like it, then
she could just say so.  And we could go back to packing.
     So, I kissed her.  And she kissed me back.  And we lay down
on the floor and kept kissing.  And it was soft.  And we made
quiet noises.  And kept silent.  And still.  We went over to the
bed and lay down on all the things that weren't put in suitcases.
And we touched each other from the waist up over our clothes.
And then under our clothes.  And then without clothes.  And it
was so beautiful.  She was so beautiful.  She took my hand and
slid it under her pants.  And I touched her.  And I just couldn't
believe it.  It was like everything made sense.  Until she moved
her hand under my pants, and she touched me.
     That's when I stopped her.
     "What's wrong?" she asked.  "Did that hurt?"
     I shook my head.  It felt good actually.  I didn't know what
was wrong.
     "I'm sorry.  I didn't mean to--"
     "No.  Don't be sorry," I said.
     "But, I feel bad," she said.
     "Please don't feel bad.  It was very nice," I said.  I was starting
to get really upset.
     "You're not ready?" she asked.
     I nodded.  But that wasn't it.  I didn't know what it was.
     "It's okay that you're not ready," she said.  She was being really
nice to me, but I was just feeling so bad.
     "Charlie, do you want to go home?" she asked.
     I guess I nodded because she helped me get dressed.  And then
she put on her shirt.  And I wanted to kick myself for being such a
baby.  Because I loved Sam.  And we were together.  And I was
ruining it.  Just ruining it.  Just terrible.  I felt so terrible.
     She took me outside.
     "Do you need a ride?" she asked.  I had my father's car.  I
wasn't drunk.  She looked really worried.
     "No, thanks."
     "Charlie, I'm not going to let you drive like this."
     "I'm sorry.  I'll walk then," I said.
     "It's two o'clock in the morning.  I'm driving you home."
     She went to another room to get the car keys.  I just stood in
the entry hall.  I felt like I wanted to die.
     "You're white as a sheet, Charlie.  Do you need some water?"
     "No.  I don't know." I started to cry really hard.
     "Here.  Just lie down on the couch," she said.
     She laid me down on the couch.  She brought out a damp
washcloth and put it on my forehead.
     "You can sleep here tonight.  Okay?"
     "Okay."
     "Just calm down.  Take deep breaths."
     I did what she told me.  And just before I fell asleep, I said
something.
     "I can't do that anymore.  I'm sorry," I said.
     "It's okay, Charlie.  Just go to sleep," Sam said.
     But I wasn't talking to Sam anymore.  I was talking to
someone else.
     When I fell asleep, I had this dream.  My brother and my sister
and I were watching television with my Aunt Helen.  Everything
was in slow motion.  The sound was thick.  And she was doing
what Sam was doing.  That's when I woke up.  And I didn't know
what the hell was going on.  Sam and Patrick were standing over
me.  Patrick asked if I wanted some breakfast.  I guess I nodded.
We went and ate.  Sam still looked worried.  Patrick looked
normal.  We had bacon and eggs with their parents, and everyone
made small talk.  I don't know why I'm telling you about bacon
and eggs.  It's not important.  It's not important at all.  Mary
Elizabeth and everyone came over, and while Sam's mom was
busy checking everything twice, we all walked to the driveway.
Sam and Patrick's parents got in the van.  Patrick got in the
driver's side of Sam's pickup truck, telling everyone he'd see them
in a couple of days.  Then, Sam hugged and said good-bye to
everyone.  Since she was coming back for a few days toward the
end of the summer, it was more of a "see ya" than a good-bye.
     I was last.  Sam walked up and held me for a long time.
Finally, she whispered in my ear.  She said a lot of wonderful
things about how it was okay that I wasn't ready last night and
how she would miss me and how she wanted me to take care of
myself while she was gone.
     "You're my best friend," was all I could say in return.
     She smiled and kissed my cheek, and it was like for a moment,
the bad part of last night disappeared.  But it still felt like a
good-bye rather than a "see ya." The thing was, I didn't cry.  I
didn't know what I felt.
     Finally, Sam climbed into her pickup, and Patrick started it up.
And a great song was playing.  And everyone smiled.  Including
me.  But I wasn't there anymore.
     It wasn't until I couldn't see the cars that I came back and
things started feeling bad again.  But this time, they felt much
worse.  Mary Elizabeth and everyone were crying now, and they
asked me if I wanted to go to the Big Boy or something. I told
them no.  Thank you.  I need to go home.
     "Are you okay, Charlie?" Mary Elizabeth asked.  I guess I was
starting to look bad again because she looked worried.
     "I'm fine.  I'm just tired," I lied.  I got in my dad's car, and
drove away.  And I could hear all these songs on the radio, but the
radio wasn't on.  And when I got into the driveway, I think I
forgot to turn off the car.  I just went to the couch in the family
room where the TV is.  And I could see the TV shows, but the
TV wasn't on.
     I don't know what's wrong with me.  It's like all I can do is
keep writing this gibberish to keep from breaking apart.  Sam's
gone.  And Patrick won't be home for a few days.  And I just
couldn't talk with Mary Elizabeth or anybody or my brother or
anybody in my family. Except maybe my aunt Helen.  But she's
gone.  And even if she were here, I don't think I could talk to her
either.  Because I'm starting to feel like what I dreamt about her
last night was true.  And my psychiatrist's questions weren't weird
after all.
     I don't know what I'm supposed to do now.  I know other
people have it a lot worse.  I do know that, but it's crashing in
anyway, and I just can't stop thinking that the little kid eating
french fries with his mom in the shopping mall is going to grow
up and hit my sister.  I'd do anything not to think that.  I know
I'm thinking too fast again, and it's all in my head like the trance,
but it's there, and it won't go away. I just keep seeing him, and he
keeps hitting my sister, and he won't stop, and I want him to stop
because he doesn't mean it, but he just doesn't listen, and I don't
know what to do.
     I'm sorry, but I have to stop this letter now.
     But first, I want to thank you for being one of those people
who listens and understands and doesn't try to sleep with people
even though you could have.  I really mean it, and I'm sorry I've
put you through this when you don't even know who I am, and
we've never met in person, and I can't tell you who I am because I
promised to keep all those little secrets. I just don't want you to
think that I picked your name out of the phone book.  It would
kill me if you thought that.  So, please believe me when I tell you
that I felt terrible after Michael died, and I saw a girl in class, who
didn't notice me, and she talked all about you to a friend of hers.
And even though I didn't know you, I felt like I did because you
sounded like such a good person.  The kind of person who
wouldn't mind receiving letters from a kid.  The kind of person
who would understand how they were better than a diary because
there is communion and a diary can be found. I just don't want
you to worry about me, or think that you've met me, or waste
your time anymore.  I'm so sorry that I wasted your time because
you really do mean a lot to me and I hope you have a very nice life
because I really think you deserve it.  I really do.  I hope you do,
too.  Okay, then.  Goodbye.
     Love always,
     Charlie
   
Epilogue
   
August 23, 1992
Dear friend,
     I've been in the hospital for the past two months.  They just
released me yesterday.  The doctor told me that my mother and
father found me sitting on the couch in the family room.  I was
completely naked, just watching the television, which wasn't on.
I wouldn't speak or snap out of it, they said.  My father even
slapped me to wake me up, and like I told you, he never hits.  But
it didn't work.  So, they brought me to the hospital where I stayed
when I was seven after my aunt Helen died.  They told me I didn't
speak or acknowledge anyone for a week.  Not even Patrick,
whom I guess visited me during that time.  It's scary to think
about.
     All I remember is putting the letter in the mailbox.  The next
thing I knew, I was sitting in a doctor's office.  And I remembered
my aunt Helen.  And I started to cry.  And the doctor, who turned
out to be a very nice woman, started asking me questions.  Which
I answered.
     I don't really want to talk about the questions and the answers.
 But I kind of figured out that everything I dreamt about my aunt
Helen was true.  And after a while, I realized that it happened
every Saturday when we would watch television.
     The first few weeks in the hospital were very hard.
     The hardest part was sitting in the doctor's office when the
doctor told my mom and dad what had happened. I have never
seen my mother cry so much.  Or my father look so angry.
Because they didn't know it was happening when it was.
     But the doctor has helped me work out a lot of things since
then.  About my aunt Helen.  And about my family.  And friends.
And me.  There are a lot of stages to these kinds of things, and
she was really great through all of them.
     The thing that helped me the most, though, was the time I
could have visitors.  My family, including my brother and sister,
always came for those days until my brother had to go back to
school to play football.  After that, my family came without my
brother, and my brother sent me cards.  He even told me on his
last card that he read my report on Walden and liked it a lot,
which made me feel really good.  Just like the first time I saw
Patrick.  The best thing about Patrick is that even when you're in
a hospital, he doesn't change.  He just cracks jokes to make you
feel better instead of asking you questions about feeling worse.
He even brought me a letter from Sam, and Sam said that she was
coming back at the end of August, and if I got better by then, she
and Patrick would drive me through the tunnel.  And this time, I
could stand in the back of the pickup truck if I wanted to.  Things
like that helped more than anything.
     The days when I received mail were good, too.  My
grandfather sent me a really nice letter.  So did my great aunt.  So
did my grandma and Great Uncle Phil.  My Aunt Rebecca even
sent me flowers with a card that was signed by all my Ohio
cousins.  It was nice to know that they were thinking about me
just like it was nice the time Patrick brought Mary Elizabeth and
Alice and Bob and everyone for a visit.  Including Peter and
Craig.  I guess they're friends again.  And I was glad they were.
Just like I was glad that Mary Elizabeth did most of the talking.
Because it made things feel more normal.  Mary Elizabeth even
stayed a little later than the others.  I was so happy to have a
chance to talk with her alone before she left for Berkeley.  Just
like I was happy for Bill and his girlfr when they came to see me
two weeks ago.  They're getting married this November, and they
want me to go to their wedding.  It's nice to have things to look
forward to.
     The time it started to feel like everything was going to be all
right was the time when my sister and brother stayed after my
parents had left.  This was some time in July.  They asked me a lot
of questions about Aunt Helen because I guess nothing had ever
happened to them.  And my brother looked really sad.  And my
sister looked really mad.  It was at that time that things started to
get clearer because there was nobody to hate anymore after that.
     What I mean is that I looked at my brother and sister, and I
thought that maybe someday they would be an aunt and uncle,
just like I would be an uncle.  Just like my mother and Aunt Helen
were sisters.
     And we could all sit around and wonder and feel bad about
each other and blame a lot of people for what they did or didn't
do or what they didn't know.  I don't know.  I guess there could
always be someone to blame.  Maybe if my grandfather didn't hit
her, my mom wouldn't be so quiet.  And maybe she wouldn't have
married my dad because he doesn't hit.  And maybe I would never
have been born.  But I'm very glad to have been born, so I don't
know what to say about it all especially since my mom seems
happy with her life, and I don't know what else there is to want.
     It's like if I blamed my aunt Helen, I would have to blame her
dad for hitting her and the friend of the family that fooled around
with her when she was little.  And the person that fooled around
with him.  And God for not stopping all this and things that are
much worse.  And I did do that for a while, but then I just
couldn't anymore.  Because it wasn't going anywhere.  Because it
wasn't the point.
     I'm not the way I am because of what I dreamt and
remembered about my aunt Helen.  That's what I figured out
when things got quiet.  And I think that's very important to
know.  It made things feel clear and together.  Don't get me
wrong.  I know what happened was important.  And I needed to
remember it.  But it's like when my doctor told me the story of
these two brothers whose dad was a bad alcoholic.  One brother
grew up to be a successful carpenter who never drank.  The other
brother ended up being a drinker as bad as his dad was.  When
they asked the first brother why he didn't drink, he said that after
he saw what it did to his father, he could never bring himself to
even try it.  When they asked the other brother, he said that he
guessed he learned how to drink on his father's knee.  So, I guess
we are who we are for a lot of reasons.  And maybe we'll never
know most of them.  But even if we don't have the power to
choose where we come from, we can still choose where we go
from there.  We can still do things.  And we can try to feel okay
about them.
     I think that if I ever have kids, and they are upset, I won't tell
them that people are starving in China or anything like that
because it wouldn't change the fact that they were upset.  And
even if somebody else has it much worse, that doesn't really
change the fact that you have what you have. Good and bad.  Just
like what my sister said when I had been in the hospital for a
while.  She said that she was really worried about going to
college, and considering what I was going through, she felt really
dumb about it.  But I don't know why she would feel dumb.  I'd
be worried, too.  And really, I don't think I have it any better or
worse than she does.  I don't know.  It's just different.  Maybe it's
good to put things in perspective, but sometimes, I think that the
only perspective is to really be there.  Like Sam said.  Because it's
okay to feel things.  And be who you are about them.
     When I got released yesterday, my mom drove me home.  It
was in the afternoon, and she asked me if I was hungry.  And I
said yes.  Then, she asked me what I wanted, and I told her I
wanted to go to McDonald's like we did when I was little and got
sick and stayed home from school.  So, we went there.  And it
was so nice to be with my mom and eat french fries.  And later
that night to be with my family at dinnertime and have things just
be like they always were.  That was the amazing part.  Things just
keep going.  We didn't talk about anything heavy or light.  We
were just there together.  And that was enough.
     So, today my father went to work.  And my mother took my
sister and me out to take care of last-minute things for my sister
since she's leaving for college in a few days.  When we got back, I
called Patrick's house because he said that Sam should be home
by then.  Sam answered the phone.  And it was so nice to hear her
voice.
     Later, they came by in Sam's pickup truck.  And we went to
the Big Boy just like we always did.  Sam told us about her life at
school, which sounded very exciting.  And I told her about my life
in the hospital, which didn't.  And Patrick made jokes to keep
everyone honest.  After we left, we got in Sam's pickup truck,
and just like Sam promised, we drove to the tunnel.
     About half a mile from the tunnel, Sam stopped the car, and I
climbed in back.  Patrick played the radio really loud so I could
hear it, and as we were approaching the tunnel, I listened to the
music and thought about all the things that people have said to
me over the past year.  I thought about Bill telling me I was
special.  And my sister saying she loved me.  And my mom, too.
And even my dad and brother when I was in the hospital.  I
thought about Patrick calling me his friend.  And I thought about
Sam telling me to do things.  To really be there.  And I just
thought how great it was to have friends and a family.
     As we went into the tunnel I didn't hold up my arms like I was
flying.  I just let the wind rush over my face.  And I started crying
and smiling at the same time.  Because I couldn't help feeling just
how much I loved my aunt Helen for buying me two presents.
And how much I wanted the present I bought my mom for my
birthday to be really special.  And how much I wanted my sister
and brother and Sam and Patrick and everyone else to be happy.
     But mostly, I was crying because I was suddenly very aware of
the fact that it was me standing up in that tunnel with the wind
over my face.  Not caring if I saw downtown.  Not even thinking
about it.  Because I was standing in the tunnel.  And I was really
there.  And that was enough to make me feel infinite.
     Tomorrow, I start my sophomore year of high school.  And
believe it or not, I'm really not that afraid of going.  I'm not sure if
I will have the time to write any more letters because I might be
too busy trying to "participate."
     So, if this does end up being my last letter, please believe that
things are good with me, and even when they're not, they will be
soon enough.
     And I will believe the same about you.
     Love always,
     Charlie
THE END
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