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Information Being Gay Sucks
Posted by: WMASG - 12-26-2025, 10:17 AM - Replies (1)

Being gay sucks. It’s not as bad as say, waking up to discover you have leukemia, but I think it ranks up there with being told you’re a diabetic. My Dad is a doctor so I tend to think of disasters in medical metaphors.
Being a diabetic means you have to look forward to not being able to eat where and when and maybe anything you like. You can’t go to parties because you can’t drink. And you are maybe going to go blind or have your legs cut off.
Being gay is gonna be just as bad. You can’t go to parties because nobody wants you. Boom. The instant anybody finds out, you’re right to the bottom of the cool pile along with the spastic kids from special education. Your best buds get nervous around you. Less than a week later they won’t want to hang out with you anymore. Uh, not this afternoon, Michael. I gotta do my homework. Right. The only homework Terry has ever done is copying from me or phoning me up wailing so I’ll read him my answers over the phone in the morning before school. But I could already picture it.
Maybe nobody’s going to tell you they have to cut your legs off because you’re gay, but what about getting AIDS, huh? I think I could live as a cripple, if I really, really had to. Nobody survives getting AIDS. When I was in elementary school there was a girl in our school who had it. She was a creepy little thing, a grade younger than me with a permanently runny nose. And every time anybody spoke to her or about her, their voices changed, into a sad little coo, kind of a murmur. The same thing is going to happen when people talk to me. Their voices will change, kind of laughing, embarrassed just to talk to me. And when I ’m not there, Wheee! The voices are going to go up, sing song like kids: Na-na-na-na-NAH-na. Michael’s-got-a-BOY-friend. She died. So I’m not gonna die of this. I don’t have to get AIDS. But at least they were trying to be nice to her.
Alright. I’d rather be alive and gay than dead. But it still sucks. I’ve got a terminal condition. I can’t fool myself. I’m going to be gay until the day I die.
I think gay guys had it easier in the fifties. I mean, back then you didn’t have to believe a thing like that about yourself. So I looked at Stewie Coburn and got a hard-on. So what? Musta been my tight pants. I mean, I’m still going to marry my high school date and have kids. I don’t got no other choice about it. At least they could pretend it wasn’t true, it wasn’t them. It just wasn’t so in those days. There was no Gay Rights movement.
But now you know, they still say. “It could be a phase…” But they smile pityingly. They don’t believe a word of it. It’s just the word they use to mean, get used to it slowly. Phase. Fuck that. Nope, It’s not a phase. I looked at Judy Whitemarsh’s tits, and all I could think of was how pink the nipples were. Looked like they were irritated or chapped raw. I wanted to say; don’t you want to put Vaseline on them, or something? And I looked at Stewie Coburn when he was standing in front of his locker, with his eyes almost gummed shut because it was just eight o’clock in the morning and his mouth hanging slightly open, goofy. And he reached down because he wasn’t awake enough to know where he was and he scratched his nuts. Boom. It wasn’t even like I could see what he had in there. Or that you could call Stewie Coburn remotely cute. He was wearing baggy grey sweats, he coulda been a eunuch, but it was enough anyway, knowing it was his balls he was scratching. My jeans get a swollen fly. Joy.
It was never going to be worth getting out of bed in the morning again. Ever. But it was Saturday. At least I could lie there and think about how my life was wrecked. I didn’t have to get up and rush off to school and slam right into faking normal. I punched my pillow.
Faking it, yeah. My life stretched out in front of me dolefully. Faking it. No way I was going to let anybody find out, make the big admission while I was still in high school. To thine own self be true, they say. Right, well to mine own self, being true was to cover it up so I didn’t become the butt of every joke in the school. The butt. That was a joke, got that?
So I’d just keep slogging along and I’d get a girl and I’d do the big thing with her, to prove it wasn’t so, just in case anybody ever got any suspicions about me. I hadn’t been intending to score with a girl. I hadn’t been in any hurry about it. But I’d better get around to it now. That was the plan. Fake it, pretend to be kewl instead of being a total loser, and then, as soon as I was old enough, blast out of here to some big city where I could lose myself in promiscuous gay sex in dirty public washrooms.
Yuck. What a life plan. I sat straight up in bed. No doubt about it. The idea set up a tiny tight frisson of interest in my lower belly. Lose myself in promiscuous gay sex in… As if I’d want to! But my body reacted to it all the same.
I pulled my jeans on. Then I took them off. I padded into my Dad’s bedroom in my Joe Boxers and borrowed a pair of his sweats. My jeans were snug. No telling who or what was going to give me a hard-on now. I’d take a leaf from Stewie’s book and wear my pants so loose that I could hide a football in the folds of cloth, much less a hard-on. Now I knew what short-term project I had in mind. I had to go out and buy myself the biggest, coolest baggiest pants I could find in the mall. Short term: buy a pair of pants I could hide in. Long term: find a girl and fuck her.
I went to the bottom of the stairs. “Mo-om!” There was no answer. I wandered in the direction of the kitchen. “Mom!”
My Dad was sitting at the table eating cereal. “She’s already gone out.” He looked tired. He always looked tired. I told you my Dad was a doctor. Well it was his fault I’m gay. He’s never around. He’s always getting up at the middle of the night to go in to work. Yeah. I’m gay because I have no kind of a father figure and I got raised by my mother.
And there goes my chances of convincing seventy bucks out of her to go shopping for pants. “Where has she gone?”
I must have sounded forlorn. My Dad looked up.
“I don’t know, Mike. She didn’t say.”
I eyed him, wondering how much money he had in his wallet. My Mom does all the bills. He’s always at the hospital. She has to do the finances or they’d never get paid in time.
“Morning, Mike.” He made an effort to look alive.
I took the cereal box. “You going in to work again today?”
“Not until one.” He smiled slightly for me. I sat down opposite to him and poured the cereal. Cheerios. No fat, no sugar, no preservatives. We eat healthily at our house. They taste good, though.
He didn’t say anything. He didn’t try to make conversation, so we sat there and looked at each other and ate cereal. Maybe he noticed that I was looking at him instead of reading the cereal box. He was starting to look surprised.
“Dad,” I said. “What if I’m gay?”
A look of intense pain came over his face, like as if I’d just told him that I’d been booted out of Science class for the rest of the term for being caught cheating. He just looked at me.
“I mean, I think,” I clarified. I couldn’t believe I’d said it. Here I had planned on telling nobody. This was the kind of thing I didn’t want to tell anybody. Not unless I was much older. And I’d gone and told my Dad of all people.
“What makes you think you’re gay?” he said.
“I like guys.”
He ate his cereal at crawling speed. Maybe he’d forgotten to stop eating. He was moving in slow mo. The expression of stomach cramps still hadn’t left his face.
“Maybe you’re bisexual?” he said. “I mean, you can like guys and still like girls. You don’t have to commit to a lifestyle. You could still be both.” He started to look earnest instead of in pain. “You don’t have to think that because you had some feelings for guys that you won’t ever have feelings for girls. It’s possible to be both.”
“I was kinda thinking that,” I lied.
“They’re… er, strong feelings?”
I looked at the table. My Dad was embarrassed. I made it easier for him by not meeting his eyes. I doodled with the point of my spoon on the vinyl tablecloth. “Sometimes.”
I looked up again. My dad was looking very tired. I mean, very, very, really tired. I thought he might keel over and fall asleep in his cereal, just in order to get away from this conversation. He was sagging at the shoulders. That’s why I don’t talk to my dad much. He’s too tired to raise a son. But who else could I have told? It’s sex. It’s not supposed to be moms who talk to their boys about sex. It’s supposed to be the dad, who tells his son the facts of life. So I didn’t have to feel guilty that I had gone and told him when he was too tired to cope with it. We were just having a man-to-man talk. A man to girl talk, that is.
“I don’t think you have to make any conclusions about your sexuality,” my dad was saying carefully. “If you think you’re gay, you probably are. But this is a big…” He stopped. He was going to say decision. I know he was. He thought I had decided to be gay to get some attention. “…conclusion. You can give yourself some time, Son, to decide how much it means to you.”
“Don’t I get thrown out of the house?” I asked.
I scored. I made another look of pain cross his face. “You know… Your mother and I… Michael, you will always have a place here whether you are gay or not.”
I knew damn well he was going to say something like that, but I softened anyway when I heard it. “I don’t mean to be a bug, Dad.”
“You’re not. This is important.”
I looked down. “I don’t want anyone finding out.”
He said nothing. He looked grave.
“I figure I gotta hide it. Until I’m out of high school.”
He nodded. He was thinking that was a smart choice. To thine own self be true didn’t seem to carry much weight with him either.
I gave a sigh. “I don’t like this,” I said.
“You’re quite sure?”
“The diagnosis fits the symptoms a hundred percent,” I said glumly
He shrugged sympathetically. Then he started slowly. “You know Michael, if and when you decide to experiment there are certain risks associated with a gay lifestyle that are more pronounced than with boy and girl activities…”
Bingo, I thought sourly. AIDS. As soon as I admit I’m gay that’s the first thing anyone thinks about. Predictable. No wonder my buds are going to shun me like the plague. They’re going to think I DO have the plague.
“Any activity that involves genital contact…” he started.
“Yeah. I know.” I cut him off. “Exchange of bodily fluids. By mouth or by… Yeah. Use a condom. I know all that.”
“There’s, er, dental dams if you want to…” He trailed off.
“Want to what?”
There was a silence. He was too embarrassed to describe it. I was too embarrassed to ask. Shades of the possible, in a context that included my Dad, however peripherally, were inconceivable.
But he’s a doctor. He’s used to saying the un-sayable. “Oral-anal contact can be…”
“YUCK!”
Dad stopped short. I held my lips puffed like I was holding a mouthful of barf. “I am not going to experiment with that!”
“That’s good. But you know how to do it safely. A latex barrier.”
I stuck my tongue out like a gargoyle and grimaced with disgust. “I think I’m going to stay a virgin until I’m eighteen. At least! I don’t have to actually do anything with a guy, even if I want to in some funny way. There isn’t a single other gay guy at my high school so I won’t be able to find a…” My voice dropped on the dirty word. “…boyfriend, even if I wanted to.”
My Dad had managed to finish his cereal. I don’t know how. “Don’t tell Mom, okay?” I said. “I want to be the one to tell her.”
“I won’t,” he promised.
My cereal had congealed into a glutinous mass. I ate it anyway. My Dad got up and put his bowl in the dishwasher. “I’m going back to work,” he said.
“I thought you were going to have a lie down for a couple of hours,” I said.
“Somehow I don’t think I’d be able to get to sleep.” He went upstairs to take a shower.
I went mooching down to Guy’s house. I didn’t have to avoid my buds as long as they didn’t know about it yet. I really should have been hunting up a girl but I didn’t know how to do that. I didn’t have any girl’s phone number.
Stewie and Guy were shooting baskets in the drive. I bounced in and intercepted Stewie’s ball. “Hey, guys!” I tossed it at the hoop and Guy failed to intercept it. They were both just shambling. I stopped short. A surge of terror ran through me. Oh God, they got suspicions and they don’t want to hang out with me already!
“What’s amatter?” I said.
“Nothin’” said Guy.
“What?” I repeated. They weren’t trying to avoid my eyes, just looking worried and puzzled. They were preoccupied, that was it. I caught the ball again and held it, and nobody called a foul.
“Ain’t nothin’,” Guy said.
“That asshole, Wayne says he’s going to off himself tomorrow,” Stewie said.
“He is?” We stood there in the driveway, forgetting to play.
“Why?” I said.
“I dunno.” Stewie rubbed his nose with the heel of his palm.
“He’s got to have some reason,” I said.
Wayne was Guy’s best bud. He lived in the house next door to Guy’s. He was probably looking out of his bedroom window at us just at this moment. With a major effort I kept my head from turning so that I didn’t look up at the glass.
“He’s really going to do it,” Guy said. He was staring without looking at anything, introspective.
“Why tomorrow?”
“It’s Sunday. He says maybe he won’t go to hell if he does it on a Sunday.”
“If he really wanted to do it, wouldn’t he do it now?” I said. I let the ball go.
Neither guy said anything. I looked at one of them and then the other. Nobody seemed to have any enthusiasm for throwing baskets.
“Wanna go down to the pool?” Stewie suggested vaguely.
“Where is he?” I asked.
Guy gestured his head sideways towards the windows above us.
“He asleep? If he’s not… If a guy is suicidal you’re not supposed to leave him alone. You’re supposed to keep somebody with him,” I said.
We followed Guy into Wayne’s back door. Wayne’s mother was there and she shot us a dirty look. She didn’t like the noise we made. Stewie in particular was like a thousand elephants going up the stairs with his air walkers flapping.
I was feeling kinda pleased. I didn’t want nothing to happen to Wayne but a crisis like this was good for me. It meant nobody would be looking at me and being suspicious. It meant I didn’t have to think about you-know-what for a while.
Wayne was in bed with the covers pulled up over his knees and a magazine in his lap. Stewie and Guy stood by the wall, but Guy closed the door carefully. I sat down on the foot of the bed. Wayne looked sullen.
“The guys tell me you aren’t going to live no more,” I said.
He didn’t say yes or no.
“You really mean to do this?” I said.
He nodded.
“You made a plan?”
He nodded again. This time more strongly. “My life is the shits. Everybody would be better off if I just got the hell out of here.”
“Why?” I said.
He mumbled dolefully, but it wasn’t an explanation, just a dirty word.
“How you going to do it, then?”
“I’m going to shoot my head off,” he said. “I can get the key to my brother’s gun cabinet. He just keeps the ammunition in a drawer. One bullet. Then it won’t matter anymore.”
I didn’t know what to say. I knew Wayne was flunking school, but so was Stewie. If he had a plan like that he was most likely serious. If a guy wants to use a gun to knock himself off, he really means to do it. Other stuff like drowning or taking pills he means to change his mind at the last second. But I had the idea from his plan that Wayne really meant to be dead by the end of tomorrow.
“I think we better tell your Mom,” I said.
Nobody said anything.
“He’s going to do it in the church,” Guy spoke up at last. “So he can pray first. They keep the church open after services so he can take the gun and go in there.”
“I’ve already given my stuff to Guy,” Wayne said. “I’m going to make my peace with God and then die.”
It didn’t seem to me that it would please God very much if Wayne went in the church and blew his brains out all over the altar. “Why are you going to do it?” I said again.
“I hate life.”
“Is there anything we can do, man?” I asked.
“Yeah, Bud?” said Stewie.
“I don’t need nothing,” Wayne said. He was calm. He had a resigned despair about him.
I patted him awkwardly on the shoulder. “We’d do anything, if we could,” I said.
He didn’t seem to need us there much, so I got up again and we went downstairs. We sat down on Guy’s back step where Wayne couldn’t see us.
“It’s true, he gave you all his stuff?” I asked.
Guy nodded. “His CD’s and his PS2 and all the cartridges and his books. I haven’t taken them yet. He said they were mine.”
“Why’s he going to do it?” I said.
“I dunno. He don’t want to hang out so much anymore. He just lies in there and he listens, you know?”
“Wanting to kill yourself, that’s a mental illness,” I said. “Like your brain chemicals are all out of whack. It can be treated with medication.”
“I don’t think he’s in the mood for trying Prozac,” Guy said.
“Is he really going to do it?” Stewie asked.
We looked at Stewie. “I think,” I said. I didn’t have much experience with suicidal people. I mean, except for the time that Shirley Blackett nearly got herself killed. She got so mad at Kyle Colbert for mashing her Mae West cake into her Spanish book. He’s the biggest guy on the football team and he’s on probation for aggravated assault. He did it on purpose to piss her off. She was screaming, “I’ll kill you!!” She was really going to take him on. He would have killed her so we hadda hold her back.
“There’s gotta be a reason, though,” I said. ”If we could figure out the reason maybe we could help him. Somehow we could fix it.”
“He might be mad at Francine,” Stewie said.
“Who’s Francine?” I asked.
“The girl he used to go out with.”
“How long ago was this?” I probed.
“Last winter.”
“He got dumped hard?”
“I don’t think he got dumped hard,” Guy said. “He only took her out twice. He was kinda sore about it at the time, but he doesn’t talk about her.”
“Is it his grades?”
Stewie looked at me as if I was crazy. “Wayne don’t care about his grades.”
“His parents?”
“They’re the same as they ever used to be. I mean, his parents are the shits. I wouldn’t like to have them, but they don’t seem to be acting any different than usual.”
We sat in a circle, knees nearly touching in a perplexed knot. Guy was bugged pretty badly. He was leaning his elbows on his knees and he had a bleak look on him. We all thought about it. Wayne just coasted along, never really trying or seeming to care very much about anything. And now today, he suddenly started caring, caring so much that he wanted to get away from it real bad. There was no visible reason for it. Wayne had never let on he had any particular problem about anything. He never let anyone anywhere but the surface before.
“Something’s gotta be the matter,” I said. “Something maybe’s going on and he’s not telling about it. He’s keeping it secret. He won’t tell us what the reason is.”
“How do we find it out?” said Guy sharply. He sounded real harassed now more than scared.
“I dunno,” I said.
“Maybe it’s a drug thing,” said Stewie. “I heard that, guys that lost control over the booze or the drugs, they can’t face reality, you know. So then they kill themselves. Is he, like, doing crack or something secretly?”
“I don’t think Wayne does drugs, does he?” I looked at Guy.
“He doesn’t,” said Guy shortly.
“That what is it?” Stewie demanded. “What kind of a big secret would make a guy want to kill himself?”
There was a long pause. I thought of something and didn’t say it. We looked at each other and we all got the same kind of uneasy looks on our faces. It was Stewie that found the words. “Do you think he could be a fag?”
“We don’t know that!” I said shrilly.
“No way,” Guy said. “No way in hell. Not possible. He couldn’t be. No. Certainly not. Oh God, I hope not.”
“Yeah. He did go out with Francine. And before that, the year before, with Angel,” Stewie pointed out. “Wayne goes out with girls.”
“That was six months ago,” Guy said. “I mean he does go out with girls, but not very often. Not very long…”
We looked at the house behind us, because somewhere behind that house was the house that Wayne was in.
“He never told me anything about he might be gay,” Guy said uncomfortably. “But then he wouldn’t tell. I don’t think he would.”
I looked at Guy. I had never really quite looked at him that way before. I’d been trying not to. I looked at him trying to evaluate if another guy could get a crush on him. Guy was slender, graceful, all sleek muscle… and he had a chin with a dimple in it. Yeah, plenty of girls got a crush on him. Could Wayne get a crush on his best bud?
“If he’s gay we can’t cure him,” Stewie said. “That’s true isn’t it? If a guy is gay, he’s stuck with it?”
Guy got a new, alarmed look in his brown eyes. “Oh fuck, I hope he’s not gay,” he said. His thoughts had probably been going where mine were. “I mean, he always liked to fool around. We’d punch one another and fall on the ground and all that. But he hasn’t been doing it the last few months. He’s been doing it less and less. Maybe he started to get nervous about it, like he would, I guess?”
Terry came around the corner just then. He jumped off his bike and it fell to the driveway with a crash that set the wheels spinning. He stood and waited for us to say Hi. I saw the expression on his face go from happy and expectant to startled-looking and then to hurt, and then to blank all because all we did was sit and stare at him. He sauntered over, hands wedged into his pockets. “Hey guys,” he said coolly. He propped himself against the wall of the garage.
“Fuck,” Guy mumbled.
“Shit,” said Stewie.
“Piss,” I said, keeping up.
Terry raised an eyebrow. “Pretty bummed out today?” he commented.
“Wayne’s going to off himself,” I reported.
Terry lost the cool look and dropped into a squat beside us right away. “What!?” he exclaimed.
“It’s true,” Stewie said dolefully. “We don’t know why. Guy thinks Wayne is really a faggot. He thinks that’s the reason. But we don’t know. Wayne won’t tell us.”
“Wayne’s a fruit?” Terry said. He goggled at us. “What do you mean he’s going to off himself? For real? How do you know this? How can you know this?”
“Wayne says it,” Guy said. “He says he’s going to kill himself tomorrow. He made a plan. He’s got a gun to do it with.” Guy sounded tired. “He gave me all his stuff. He says he wants me to have it.”
“Oh, man,” Terry said. “He’s going to do it because he’s gay? Oh man, you mean his parents found out?”
“Wait a minute,” I said uncomfortably, “We don’t know he’s gay. We’re just guessing. It doesn’t mean he’s gay, just because he’s going to kill himself.”
“Yeah?” said Stewie. “My dad works with Wayne’s dad. Let me tell you. I’ve heard what he says about fags. I know. When Wayne’s dad finds out Wayne is a faggot, Pow!” Stewie smacked his palm with his fist. “Wayne is going to find himself on the street so fast the only thing he’ll get to pack and bring along is a couple of black eyes. If he doesn’t kill himself he’s going to wish he were dead.”
“Oh, man,” said Terry.
“It’s not his fault if he’s gay,” Guy said miserably. “You guys have got to realise that. It’s not like Wayne has made a choice to be like that. Maybe he got molested or something when he was a kid. I don’t know what makes a person get bent like that. But it’s not his fault. He can’t help the way he is.”
Terry’s eyes were round. “His parents don’t know yet?”
“Nope.” Guy shook his head.
“Thank God!” said Terry. “We got a chance yet. What are we going to do?” he demanded.
“We don’t know what to do,” I said. “We’re trying to figure that out. We’re not going to let him just go and off himself. We’re going to try and do something. We just don’t know what yet.”
“We’re going to come up with a way to help him, right?” Guy asked hopefully. “You guys, and me, we’re going to find some way?”
“Yeah,” I said. Stewie nodded vigorously. Terry echoed the nod.
“Oh, man,” said Terry. “I had this idea, I mean I knew he was getting fed up with things. He stopped coming to his detentions. I knew he was feeling bad about stuff. But, wow! He’s really got a gun to off himself with?”
“It’s his brother’s gun,” Stewie said.
“Right,” I said. “Look. That gun is the danger point, right? We can’t let Wayne take that gun into the church. We got to make sure he doesn’t do that. Okay?”
The guys all nodded at me, but I was deep in thought. “And we gotta have somebody stay with him tonight. We can’t leave him alone overnight either. We really oughta have somebody with him now.” I looked up at the house worriedly. “The main thing is, like, we got to intervene before he can do it. Whatever it takes, we don’t let him pick up that gun. I mean, even if we have to tell the police or something.”
“So who’s going to sleep over with him tonight?” Stewie said.
“I will,” Guy said immediately. “We used to do that a lot, couple of times a week when we were in junior high. I can do that.”
“You’re going to crash with a fag?” Terry demanded.
“Fuck off!” Guy rejoined fiercely.
“Hey,” I said, “Wayne has been Guy’s bud since forever. It’s not like that.”
“I’m going to bring my sleeping bag and sleep on the floor,” Guy said.
“Okay, but how do we keep him from offing himself when we’re not there?” Terry asked.
“We got to take the gun away from him,” I said.
“What’s to stop him from getting another one?” Terry said. “I mean, if a guy wants to do it, Mike, there’s lots of ways he can do it. He can throw himself under a bus. He can make a noose and hang himself. If Wayne wants to bump himself off he can find another way to do it, even if we do swipe his gun.”
“That’s why we got to stay with him,” I exclaimed.
“We got to babysit him?” Terry said. “But how long? I mean, how is that gonna help?”
“You think of something then!” I said.
Terry didn’t come up with any suggestions. “My uncle killed himself. Well, really he was my great uncle. He did it in his truck. He had cancer and he didn’t want to live anymore so he did that, put his truck off the road, on purpose and it made my Mom cry. But he was old. He must have been nearly fifty so it doesn’t count.”
Most of the time hearing something like this would have made me interested. I get curious about gruesome stuff like that. But this wasn’t the time. I was trying to stretch my brain and think of what we could do for Wayne. I didn’t want to hear about anybody who had succeeded in committing suicide.
I don’t think Guy wanted to hear it either. “How do we make the guy want to live again?” he asked thickly. “That’s what we got to find out. How do we make the guy wanta live again?”
“We can get him a girl and cure him of being a fag,” Terry said.
“You’re a dumb shit, Terry,” Guy exclaimed. “That doesn’t work. They can’t cure you of being gay. If you’re bent that way you’re bent.”
“Yeah, right,” said Terry. He stood up and leaned over lopsided and dropped his wrist. He walked funny on purpose, mincing. “I’m a born faggot. I’m really bent,” he chanted. “Anybody want to kiss me, cause I’m feeling oh so down…”
I thought about leaping up and belting Terry to make him shut up, but all I did was stiffen up and then freeze with my butt a half inch off the step. I started a lunge towards Terry and then stopped. I couldn’t go defending faggots or the guys might think I was as big a fag as Wayne. It was Guy that cut him off short. “You gonna do that cakewalk at his funeral too, Terry?”
Terry stopped and just stood there. Terry had an oops look on his face. Then he came quietly and sat down, nearer to me than to Guy. We just sat there. I put my chin on my fists and Stewie looked at the toes of his sneakers and Guy scowled into space. He was eying his Mom’s rhododendron like he wanted to chop it down.
We were sitting there when Nikolas came around the corner. “Hey!” he said, brightening up visibly at the sight of us. “Anyone catch the new Survivor on TV last night?” He chortled. “When she took her bikini top off I just died…!” His expression faded, the smirk dropping away. He put his hands in his pockets staying at the other end of the drive and staring at us bleakly. None of us said anything.
“But I thought you guys liked Survivor,” said Nikolas plaintively.
“Wayne’s in trouble, Nik,” I said.
Nikolas brightened up instantly. “Ooh, poor prick! Did he get kicked outta school or something?”
I shook my head.
“You gotta understand,” Guy said slowly. “None of this is Wayne’s fault. None of this is anything he can control. Like, it’s the genes you’re born with, right? And the depression, suicide stuff, it’s the same way. It’s brain chemicals. Right, Mike?”
“Right,” I said.
“Wayne is dead!!” Nikolas lost his cheerful look. His eyes went round and full of pain. “Aw, no! Suicide??!”
“Not yet,” said Stewie. “But he’s gonna, because he’s gay and thinks everybody hates him.”
“Tomorrow,” added Guy.
“Do something!!” Nik yelped. “Mike! Do something! Whaddya do to stop a suicide? You’re the doctor’s kid. You should know!”
“I dunno,” I said. “We’re trying to think of something.”
“Go up there and tell him we don’t hate him! I don’t care if he’s gay!” Nik exclaimed. “You can’t fucking let him kill himself because he’s gay. He can get himself cured or something, or go into the ministry. You don’t let him just kill himself!”
“You think we don’t care, Nik?” said Guy bitterly.
But Nik had stopped short, eyes going round again. “Ooh, no wonder he hides out in the gym lockers when he’s cutting a class. Omigawd, the year before last we hadda share a locker! You know how many times I been naked around him? Ooh my fuck! All those times he must have been looking at me.”
He sat down heavily. The shock was so bad that his eyes stayed round while he stared at us.
“Yeah, why don’t we just tell him we don’t blame him for being gay?” Terry said. “We could tell him we don’t mind it and we’ll still be his buds and he doesn’t have to hide it no more. If we all go up there in a group and we say it together…”
“Right,” said Guy. He gave a hard nod.
“Don’t say you don’t blame him for being gay,” I said. “That sounds like you do think it’s his fault.”
Terry gave a worried grimace.
“We tell him we love him, he’s our bud, he’s just like the rest of us. He’s our amigo, right? No matter what,” said Guy.
“I’m not telling Wayne I love him,” Nik said. “I’ll tell him he can be gay if he wants to, but just not at me. He already has a thing for my ass. If I tell him I love him he’s gonna think I have a thing for his ass. I can’t say I love you to a faggot!”
“You don’t have to tell him you love him,” Guy said sharply. “You don’t have to be in this at all.”
“I don’t want Wayne dead,” Nik protested. “I just don’t want him after my ass.”
“What? You think Wayne being gay means he’s after your ass?” Guy said. “You don’t know nothing. You didn’t even suspect he was gay, or know he meant to kill himself until we told you. He’s not after your ass.”
“He’s after your ass?” Nik said. “Omigawd, Guy! Are you going to let him?”
“Of course I’m not going to let him!” Guy glared at Nik.
“We got to quit talking and go back up there,” I said. “Guys? I mean, it’s a shock and all that, but come on, can we get to the plan? You wanna just sit here talking about it and meanwhile he’s all alone there, feeling alone there, maybe he’ll do it early? This is no bullshit argument we’re having. We are trying to save a life.”
“Yeah,” said Terry. “Let’s go back there, tell Wayne he don’t have to kill himself, it’s not so bad that he’s gay. We can tell him we don’t mind having a gay in our gang at all.”
“Don’t tell him you don’t mind,” I said.
“Okay, we’ll tell him we don’t care,” said Terry.
“You want to go tell a suicidal guy that you don’t care??!” Guy’s voice went up. “You dumb turkey! Terry, you don’t say anything! You’re such a dumb shit! You can come with us. You can nod. But if you open your mouth, I personally am going to put my fist so far down your throat I’ll get your tonsils stuck in my knuckles!”
He was so forceful that we didn’t say anything. Guy had stood up. “Right,” he said. “What are we saying? Let’s get this straight. What are we saying and who is saying it?” He looked around.
“We tell him he can’t have our asses but he can still hang out with us,” said Nik.
Terry gave a nod, but he was speaking slow and looking at Guy cautiously. “Yeah, we say we won’t let anyone know, we’ll keep it a secret, just the bunch of us. Tell him we won’t tell nobody about his problem.”
“Don’t tell him he has a problem,” I said.
“So now it’s such a big bad guilty secret we got to tell him he shouldn’t admit to it?” Guy was looking bad. His voice was wobbling and it sounded like it wasn’t just anger. “We got to tell him he should be ashamed? It’s guys like you…” He trailed off. He couldn’t talk.
We had all stood up. Terry moved behind me. “Umm… Mike?” said Terry.
I pulled a big breath in. “Ahh… Stew? Why don’t you go up there, right now and sit with him. But don’t say nothing about what we’re planning. You just want to stay with him, no matter where he goes, like if he goes out, you go along with him. ’Cause he can’t be alone.” I picked Stewie because out of the lot of us he was the one who ran off at the mouth the least. I figured he’d have the best chance of not saying anything that would make Wayne fall right over the edge.
“And Nik? Can you go hunt down Wayne’s brother and ask him can you borrow his gun? You don’t say nothing about Wayne being suicidal; you just see if Miller’ll let you have it, and then we can hide it, make sure Wayne doesn’t get it.”
“Okay,” said Nik.
“And Terry, you can look in the phone book and see if there’s some suicide crisis line. You call them and tell them about Wayne. That way we can ask an expert and make it anonymous so we don’t get Wayne in trouble, right?”

Continue reading..

Information Death and the veteran
Posted by: WMASG - 12-26-2025, 10:16 AM - No Replies

My electric heater pinging woke me in the dark. The room was bitterly cold. It was morning and I had been dreaming about the skeleton. I did not know the time, only that the coils in the heater were waking slowly to life and that I had to get up and boil water, in case they turned the power off again soon. They turn the electricity off during the night to conserve power at the generating station. We only get electricity in the morning and at suppertime so that people can do their necessary cooking.
I stumbled around in the chill darkness, automatically. My large pot was full of water. It had frozen in the pot. I switched on the burner under it, and then crouched trembling in front of the heater to dress. I did not turn on my electric lamp. If there is too much draw upon the power, it goes off quicker. The orange coils of the humming heater gave enough light to get into my clothes.
The skeleton dances nightly in my dreams. It comes for me dancing, reaching out fleshless fingers to take my one hand and draw me into the dance. Gaunt white bones jangle absurdly. The face is all jaw and teeth, grinning in death's rictus. I've seen this skeleton in my dreams for years. I've seen this skeleton in the pages of books, in old woodcuts.
In Death and The Maiden, a girl looks up surprised from her garden. In Death and The Huswife, a woman is taken abruptly from her bake oven. In Death and The Miser, an old man is snatched from his counting house. The humans in the pictures are interrupted by the spectre and turn in astonishment as they are led away.
But I am not surprised. The stark face has eyes that are dark pits. I've dreamed of that face so often. I've been waiting for Death a long time. It has had a long journey. Each year and each night it is closer.
Last night I dreamed that the skeleton was just outside my door. My calendar on the wall was pageless. There are no more pages to turn. Today is the day that the skeleton will come for me.
It was also the morning of Christmas Eve, about six in the morning. Today, I thought, I am going to die. So I'm not going to see Christmas day. When I closed my eyes, I could see the image again, the paper white, gangling human form reaching out the skinny bone fingers, impossibly long. I dressed clumsily and hurriedly. I was afraid. It would be interesting to be dead. I had a question that I wanted answered and the only way to find out the answer to my question would be to be dead.
I am of no use to anyone. It would be no tragedy for the skeleton to come and take me. A one armed man is ugly and unfit for any really productive work. I have a job, of all things, as a typist. I type out municipal records, slowly, one handed.
The room warmed up a little. The heater laboured mightily. I took my great coat off of the bed and slid into it. My empty sleeve hung heavily, for I keep it pinned up as a pocket. With the coat, a couple of frayed sweaters and the shirts that I had slept in, I was much warmer. I forayed again from the heater and went to my window.
The frost on the inside of the panes was thick. I scratched it with my fingernails until I could see outside. White snowy shavings fell inside. I held my breath so that it would not fog the glass.
Outside, the city lay dim and jagged under the deep blue dawning sky. My room is in a five story building on the top floor. I could see no lights in the buildings below. Electricity is precious, saved for heating and for cooking. The dim glimmers of candles behind the shrouded windows did not touch the dark. It was as if black out conditions still existed. The war battered buildings had crumbled corners. They stood among the mounds of un-cleared rubble. Someday, now that the ceasefire had finally jelled and appeared permanent, the rubble would be bulldozed. If my dreams were premonitory, then I would never see the rubble cleared. I was still glad that I had seen the end of the war, even if I would not see the city come back to life again.
In the dark rooms and apartments around the city, people would be bending over their electric burners, lighting the guttering stubs of candles, preparing for the day to begin.
The electricity stayed on that morning for forty-five minutes, enough time to melt the ice in my pot and heat it to steaming but not enough time to boil it. Usually we get electricity for more than an hour, but the coil in my heater dulled, and the lovely heat faded.
I sat at the table in my dim room. I stirred the hot water into the oatmeal that I had for breakfast, a quarter cup of the frozen oatmeal from the sack in the corner farthest from the heater, into a cup of the hot water. It made gruel, thin but nourishing, my usual breakfast. I stirred it around and around.
Once I was in love with a boy named Noel. He was eighteen and I was twenty-four and it was a lifetime ago. I remembered breakfast in bed with Noel, the blanket a heaving mound of warm quilts. Our knees tangled, kisses were flavoured with bacon. It was a late breakfast, midmorning, a sun dazzled room. We woke early, stayed in bed, bodies locked rocking and fused by the moistness of sweat. Saturdays completely wasted: Noel's tongue playing tickling in my chest and armpit hair, his flushed face coming up smiling from under the quilts. I had fed him by forkfuls from the fragrant mounds of food on the plate. Bacon, eggs, coffee with cream, sweet rolls, yellow butter, segments of oranges so juicy and sweet that they had burst in his mouth, and orange juice had trickled down the fingers of the hand that I no longer have. And like my fingers, Noel was gone also, like all the young men.
I could have eaten the gruel the way that it was. It would have been palatable, although it was raw. But the water had not boiled and all summer long there had been cholera in the city. There was always a chance that this water too, bought from off of the public water truck, was tainted. To get cholera was to die a slow death over days of diarrhoea.
I sat without eating in the dim cold room, stirring the porridge, until there came a knock on my door.
That roused me and surprised me. Who would knock, so lightly and so early? It was one of my neighbours, Mrs. Keitch, an old middle-aged woman who lived on the first floor. She stood in a black coat, holding a white candle, her crooked nervous smile yellow from the light of the flame.
"What's the matter?" I said. "Is there something you need?"
I'd never spoken to her before. I never spoke to any of my neighbours. They avoided me, perhaps having learned to fear all men of an age to be soldiers, during one of the two hideous times that the city had been sacked. Because of my dream I was expecting some trouble today and I did not expect anything but a very sudden trouble would bring her to my door.
But Mrs. Keitch said, "I'm selling candles. Mr. Anthoni, isn't it? Would you like to buy some candles?"
"Like those?"
The tall slim candle in her hand was for an advertisement as well as for light in the dark hall.
"I've been saving them." She smiled almost apologetically; perhaps afraid I would accuse her of hoarding. "But I've just heard that they are selling chickens in the market this morning. I want to buy a chicken. Would you buy a candle or two?"
I gave her six dollars and took two candles. They were tall hard white candles, brittle in the cold. She was knocking on the door of my neighbour across the hall, to see if she could sell more of her candles to the old couple who live there when I shut my door.
I put the candles aside. It would be good to have them. Perhaps tonight, if I was still here, and if I was not too tired to stay awake, and I could burn one of them and stay up reading old letters.
Noel wrote me hundreds of letters. His unit went East and he fought in the mud caked fields and barren wastelands that had once been productive farms. I got, I think, about a third of the letters that he wrote. Most were lost before they reached me. He wrote to me on any paper he could find, on pieces of newspaper and on requisition forms, over the printing when he couldn't find any blank sections to write on.
"I love you, love you, love you," he wrote. "You are NOT to find yourself a new boyfriend. When I come back I am going to dive into your pants, and if you have been fucking around with any of those fags from Tenshing, I will know it! I will be able to see the marks of their lips on your prick. You have been warned!!!!" I have dozens of his letters, which I had saved carefully. They stopped coming to me five years ago. Noel died.
It was time to leave, not to go to work yet, but to go to the market. The earlier I was there, the shorter the time that I would have to stand in line, perhaps. I would not have much money after buying the candles, but I could get a potato or two and those would make a good supper.
So I went out. The streets were still half dark and the paths in the snow were narrow, but well trodden. The market was filling early. That was the first thing I saw. There were more people than usual out, queued up in front of the boarded shop windows. I hurried.
"Mommy, look!" The sudden squeaking voice of a child startled everyone in the market street and made us turn. "Mommy! Look at that!" It was a small child, thin faced, pulled close by his mother's hand. His narrow arm was stretched out, and bright spots of excitement flushed his cheeks under his hood.
There was spruce tree set up, standing in a snow bank outside of the licensed rural produce dealer. On its dark green boughs a dozen yellow lights sparkled. An electric flex ran out of the dealer's store. The power had come back on again and made the tiny lights gleam in the tree's branches.
The power is back on, I thought and I felt my face widen in amazement, not that the erratic power was back on, but because of the tree.
"Mommy, what is it? Why are there lights in the tree?"
The mother, an exhausted looking woman with bare hands, red from the cold, bent close to her child. She was smiling. "It's a Christmas tree. Remember what I described to you? That tree is just to look pretty, because it's Christmas."
The child was entranced, round mouthed. Like the child, we adults stared. The gold lights gleamed like tiny stars and made the green of the tree more vivid. How long had it been since I had seen a Christmas tree? A few years, most likely. Now here was the proud, pretty symbol of celebration.
"The war's over," an old woman murmured.
No one muttered that the produce dealer was wasting precious power. We stood in a ring about the tree and gazed. Every person who came into the street halted. The little tree shone and the child laughed. A Christmas tree. Well, why not? It had been long enough. It would be a good thing to go back to celebrating Christmases.
The store was crowded and foggy with the shoppers' breath when I got in. There was a whole row of chickens, plucked and lying frozen waiting to be sold. I didn't have enough money for a chicken, but I bought potatoes and milk. That would make a good supper. Potatoes were not as dear as they had been a year ago. I bought three potatoes.
Chickens in the market, I thought, and Christmas trees! Like past holidays. One year Noel had wrapped my prick with red and green ribbons, spiralling them upward. There only had been one year with Noel, one Christmas. "This is what I want for Christmas!" he said, and he had seized my beribboned organ. "It's already wrapped…" he had said coaxingly. How silly he had been, like a kid ten years younger. And how trusting. He had fallen backwards into my arms, always confident that I would catch him, and I always had, and bent down to cover his upturned face with laughing kisses.
"Mine! Mine! Mine!" he had written in his letters. "You are mine! Tell your Colonel to send you to some nice safe place behind the lines so that you will be there waiting for me after this is all over. You must be waiting for me. I need you. I belong to you. I want you. Jesus, how I want you! Every time I think of you I get a hard-on or I come close to crying or both."
When the skeleton comes I will be ready for him. I have answers to Noel's letters and no other way to bring them to him. I have dreamed about the skeleton so many times that I'm not afraid of it. I'm only afraid of the pain that comes with dying. But the skeleton itself is not too terrible. Animated bones. They are as much absurd as horrible. My dreams don't feel terrible while I am dreaming them. I was never afraid of the skeleton and never afraid when I dreamed about my glove.
Why am I so sure that I am dreaming about my death? For years and years I had the same dreams. Sometimes I dreamed that one day a skeleton would come for me, and sometimes I dreamed that I was going to lose my glove. I had the dream about the glove until the winter before I lost my arm. And the night before I lost my arm, I dreamed that I would finally lose my glove that day.
There are two children that live in my building. I think that they are around nine and eleven, but it is hard to tell and I am not even sure if they are boy or girl, because the mismatched layers of clothes that they wear sometimes includes skirts and shawls and sometimes doesn't.
These two children have always been afraid of me. They go out and gather dung and wood and chips of coal, anything that burns. When they see me if we are going in and out of the building at the same time, they always run up the stairs with their buckets, and look back down at me with alarmed and wary faces.
They were standing outside of the building when I came back, steaming like small dragons, too absorbed in their conversation to notice me at first. They had arms full of pine boughs.
"If we just stick them up in the snow, they'll only look like we brought them home for the needles," the older one said.
"Well, we can't make them into a Christmas tree. And the tree in the market was stuck in the snow." The smaller one was clutching so many boughs that she appeared to be trying to look like a tree herself.
"They won't look like decorations. I want them to look like decorations."
Then they saw me behind them and stood looking at me.
"If you have string," I said, "you could tie them in an arch over the door. People decorate like that."
"How could we do that?" The older asked boldly.
I gestured at the doorframe. "Tie it there and there and to each other. Bring them together in the middle." They were so interested in the problem that they had forgotten to be afraid of me. They stared up at the door.
"Then you decorate the boughs," I said. "You don't have lights? You make little decorations. I have some red cloth. Do you want me to show you?"
They nodded vigorously. I went upstairs. This would have amused Noel, I thought: Putting up Christmas decorations. I came down again with a piece of cloth that had one been a red shirt. It had worn through in the arms. The cloth was soft and rotten, too soft to be worn, but the colour was still red and vivid.
"Can you tear it? In a little square?"
"This big?" The elder child tore a square, two and a half inches on the sides.
"Now stuff it, with pine needles, with anything, make a ball and tie it with the threads hanging." They stood right under me. The small one tore the cloth with her face puckered seriously, looking at the elder's handwork while she tried to copy it. The elder did what I described and had a plump, small red ball with a ragged end and threads dangling to tie it to the boughs with.
Their faces turned up, bright. "Thanks, Mr. Anthoni!" They fell on the shirt, tearing it eagerly, but carefully.
"Not too small. Don't make the pieces too small!" the younger cried.
"Don't worry. Look, we can use the seams like strings to tie the boughs up with," the older answered her.
I had to go to work. I hurried. I was running late. I had delayed to watch the children make the decorations. The winter day was not frozen hard. Old men pulling carts of fuel were struggling, because the wheels got stuck in the slush. My balance isn't good. I can't throw both arms out to steady myself if the ground is slippery. I looked down, careful with my footing as hurried along the trench like paths in the snow.
It was winter, like this the very last time that I dreamed I was going to lose my glove. I'd slept in a billet with a coal fire stove. It seemed important when I woke up that I had finally dreamed that I would lose my glove, but what did it matter really? I felt like I had reached a great change in my life, like graduating or being born even. It was only a dream. We were fighting partisans in the towns along the coastal foothills. The day ahead of me with the danger of snipers, the tense work of going house to house, searching, the possibility of mines and booby-traps: That was a lot more important than if I lost a glove, winter or not.
I never felt it when it hit me. I was in the middle of a group going up a slanted street. Gunfire ripped out without sound or sensation. When it echoed, it had echoed in my deaf ears. I took the hit and fell, feeling nothing, down and dead before the sound began.
I was cold, waking: bitterly, bitterly cold. I was gummy, sticky with blood and burning with pain. I had lain unconscious, perhaps three hours, on the road between four dead soldiers and I was lying in a pool of blood.
I could see my arm on the road above me. The sleeve ended, fragments of flesh had no feeling. They had frozen in the cold. I tried to get up, to pull my weak body up onto my knees. I could not. My blood had frozen and I was stuck to the ground.
My chest heaved panting. The unyielding ground was hard as stone. It sucked the warmth from me slowly. It held me locked flat like teeth. I pulled on mangled, frosted flesh. I felt savage pain around my elbow and pulled with all my strength anyway. I was frozen to the ground as securely as if I was nailed.
The blood had run from my arm under me. My coat was frozen also, by the blood that had saturated it. There was no more fresh blood. When the torn muscle had frozen, that had sealed the wounds. I could kick. I could scrabble with my boot toes. I was shuddering with the cold, dying of the cold and I could not get up.
I lay between the humped up bodies of the dead men for the middle part of the day. I didn't stop struggling feebly. I could turn a bit and look up at the vivid blue of the sky. I tried to break the frozen blood every way I could think of. By rocking side to side, I got my gummy coat freed a little. The red crystals cracked and peeled off of the black pavement. My shoulder stayed down like it was part of the road itself. My cheek was freezing where it touched the road. My face was frost bitten. The numbness spread above my elbow. Now, even when I struggled, I could not feel pain there.
And then I heard the crunch of footsteps, slow and careful in the snow. It was a partisan, a big man with a black beard who moved warily around the group of fallen men. I gave a frantic kick and his eyes gleamed at me. I could not use a weapon, even if I had been able to reach one.
He stooped at the other soldiers, sliding his mittened fingers into their pockets, searching them. He took their rifles and hung them on his back, and all the while his grinning gaze turned to me, while I kicked again and again.
He came to search me also. He poked hard in my numb ribs and pulled. Steam came from around his teeth. He didn't point a gun at me. Why should he? Bullets are expensive and I was helpless. The cold would kill me cheaply if I laid out there for a couple of hours more. When he had pulled all the weapons and any ammunition that he could find away from the men who littered the road, the partisan had gone away.
He had come back again with a weapon that needed no ammunition. He stood above me looking down. He was enormously tall, dark against the sky, a giant with an axe. His eyes measured, centred on me as he brought the tool up high. His eyes bulged as it was aimed. They fixed on me, glaring, holding me. I kicked but didn't scream. It came down unstoppable, a dead weight, hissing in the frigid sky.
It landed clean. It took him one blow. He took off my arm. I screamed blood then. The pain was numb lightening. His hands wrestled with my stump and tore me free. The frozen blood ripped as it released me, with an obscene sound like that of tape being peeled back. I was limp and screaming as the man clutched cloth against the end of my arm. The big man seemed to shimmer in and out of a black oblivion. I wavered, conscious and unconscious by turns as he wrestled with me roughly, tying up my stump and kneeling on my stomach to hold my convulsing body still.
I don't remember much of how he dragged me out of the road, nor of the hospital. I know the partisan cut off my arm just below the elbow. He was a kind enemy, because if he had been able to save my elbow, I would have had that much more use of my arm afterwards. But in the field hospital, one of our own surgeons took the arm off again, much higher, only a little below my armpit, because the rot got into the elbow.
I shivered for a month in a canvas cot, vomiting from the pain, the smell of pus disgusting as it seeped yellow beneath the bandage. I survived. I don't regret surviving. But I never again dreamed my recurring dream about the lost glove.
That is why I believe my dreams are prophetic, and why I am not very much afraid of dying. Whatever sends me my dreams, to me that means that there is something more than the world I see. Something good sent me my dreams as a warning. If there is a power for good that reaches beyond me in dreams and singled me out this way for its kindness, then I believe it will bring me back to Noel again.
When I reached the scarred concrete building, which used to be a warehouse, and is now city hall, where I work, there were trucks parked outside. I passed inside. The building smelt of heating fires where garbage had been burned, but the rooms were cold.
"We got paid!" The only one in the office was my boss, the regional census and manpower manager. Martha is a lawyer, a sixty-four-year-old woman, too arthritic to type. She was beaming from her desk, bundled in a couple of shawls. "You'd better hurry," she said. "You have to go out to the airport."
On my desk was my pay. We usually get paid every two weeks. We are supposed to be paid in advance, and if possible in scrip instead of in kind. I stared at my desk. There were a few creased pieces of scrip, clipped together. But what I saw on my desk was something I had never expected to see again. There was a bag of oranges.
I took up the bag and turned to look at her with an incredulous smile. She beamed back again. "Can you believe it? But now that the planes are coming in safely, they must have been flown in from Morocco, or even from the States! Oranges! I'm going to give one to my sister, and one to the man who brings me my firewood and one to my nephew…"
The bag held eight oranges. Not just one orange but eight. They were bright, round and vermilion. Oranges. I could almost smell, like a hallucination, the sharp sweet acidity of their scent when the peel is broken. I wanted to tear one open right away and to eat it, but I couldn't do that. To peel an orange would take time. It takes two hands to tear the bright rind back easily. I didn't have the time.
"Why am I going to the airport?" I asked her.
"There are planes expected this morning. New manpower. New people to feed. You will have to get the lists. I can't go because I am meeting with the rationing manager," she explained. 
Our job is to make and maintain the list of people on the city rolls. Usually she gets the information and I type it. The labour bureau and the rationing office need the lists of the living to allocate resources. The lists of the dead we compile so that the survivors can learn the answers to their questions later.
The lists are all important. I have a great collection of old papers to compile, the scribbled reports of fire wardens from those terrible days when the city shuddered and burned and the guns boomed: In this building on this date, a family of six, only the surname given, were killed. At this address four families: Three survivors, mother and two daughters escaped from the bottom flat. This house apparently empty when the flames consumed it. This bomb shelter on this date: a direct hit. All died.
The survivors care. They still come week after week to see if there is any news, if the one name they are seeking for has finally appeared on any lists, if there is confirmation. The lists are everything. I remember when I found Noel's name at last on a list.
MIA; a list that means everything and nothing. Missing in action. And so I went over the lists and prayed and gave up hope and hoped again and found a new list to check, waiting for confirmation for weeks and weeks. It was two years before I found his name on that other list: KIA. Killed in action. And then I knew that for two years I had been hoping when there was nothing to hope for.
"I really am not joking: Do your best to stay alive for me. I don't want to stay alive through everything I've seen and done for nothing. I'd die and get it over with if it wasn't for the thought that you will be there for me when I finally get to come home. I am living in a nightmare, and holding out for the hope that someday I'll wake up, it will be all over and I can be together with you again," Noel wrote. So I had stayed alive, but his nightmare had been stronger than he was.
Death come dance with me. Let your hand link my hand with Noel's hand. Why should I be afraid? There is no way that dying could hurt worse than when I was wounded. Whatever sent me my dreams will give me the answers that the three letters, KIA did not. Noel, did you die quickly?
There were half a dozen trucks waiting for me, ready to go to the airport. I climbed up into the cab of one beside the woman driver. She grinned at me merrily, with teeth spotted by malnutrition. The aged gears clashed and slush churned up as the ride to the airport began.
Noel was a clown, hard to pin down, seldom serious. The first night he ever flung himself down on my bed, waggling his naked rump provocatively in the air, he had used the word love. "Oooh! I love you! Come and get me!" His ass had been firm and warm and muscular, deep hollows on the sides, the most beautiful ass in the world. He used the word love so easily it was impossible to think he meant it. But then he had written me all those letters.
Smooth flesh, round hard shoulders, a supple hot body; we had wrestled. It had taken me all of my strength and both arms to pin him beneath me. So much skin and warmth. His tongue seeking up my thigh, lapping on my scrotum had made me go still. By the time his eager mouth had worked its way onto my prick, Noel had me pinned in his place. Both my arms had not been enough to hold such a cunning young fighter with so much strong young muscle.
When we got to the airport the planes had not landed. There was a delay. There was always a delay. Out on the runway little dark figures with brooms were sweeping. The white fields stretched barren to the white sky. Once there had been a forest on the edge of the airport, but it had been whittled away, tree by tree and brought back on sledges to be burned for firewood. Now there was only snow and the squat building, like a bunker that had been put up to replace the building that had burned.
I wandered slowly in the building. There was no place to sit down. The rep from the relief society was there, a teenaged girl with two long dirty braids, unloading armfuls of thin blankets. When I looked at the pile, I knew that they had been told to expect several planes.
She worked slowly at the dogged pace that I was familiar with, the way that people work who know they have several hours of labour ahead of them and begin by conserving their strength because they are already exhausted. Everyone works that way. So do I. There are not many energetic people in the city. Months of rationing had seen to that.
I thought about offering to help her, but I was tired, and too lost in my thoughts. I stood and looked at the white sky, watching for the planes instead.
Will it be a plane crashing here that brings the skeleton to me? A sudden onrush of dark metal and sound, inexorable, and then the grim white bony fingers lunging through the blood and gasoline to clutch at my wrist and drag me to itself? I hoped it wouldn't be a plane. If it were a plane then other people would die, the crew, the passengers, and the girl rep from the relief society. I would much rather be the only one to die, but just as I am sure that the skeleton is inescapable, I am sure that I can do nothing to warn the people around me.
Perhaps the war isn't over, perhaps the ceasefire has rotted apart, perhaps now the bombers are coming again and I will die as the city explodes. I shook my head denying the thought that came to me. That would be unbearable. It would be too wrong to lose the little that is left. But the unbearable has already happened, happened a hundred times over and over and I have endured my share.
Just let the skeleton come for me! I begged mentally. For me, and no one else.
Snow fell, thin and silver in the warm winter air, falling as fast as the runway sweepers could work. Another convoy of trucks came in and lined up behind ours. Their uniformed drivers, all women, came in and we traded rumours: The planes are held up at St. Stephen, but they are held up because of the weather and will be here soon. The planes are coming from a DP camp at Eirmok. They are letting the cholera patients from the camp hospital come here. The planes are held up because of paperwork. There is a cargo plane expected. The planes will be military planes, but they will not come.
Sometimes the rumours are right. Usually the rumours are wrong. I lost interest after awhile because I began to think about Noel again.
He wouldn't enlist with me. "If we enlist together, we can probably serve together," I had said.
"Suck me," Noel had grinned.
"No, Noel, I'm serious. One of us, or both of us are going to get drafted real soon. We have to make a decision now. Can't you think of anything other than sex?"
"Suck me." He had taken my head in both hands staring into my eyes, pulled my face down. "Go on. Kiss my prick."
"Noel, stop it!" I had torn away. "Please. I want to go down to the enlistment office with you."
"I don't want to."
"Be realistic! Our names are on the list! We don't even have a month left together. I want you to come with me."
"I want you to suck me. That's what I want."
"Why won't you come with me?"
"Because I don't want to come with you." When he was forced into seriousness, Noel's face had been pale. "I don't want to serve beside you. I don't want to spend every minute of the war watching you, wondering when it will be. I don't want to go into the field with you. I don't want to see it when you get hit. I don't want to be there…" His voice had trailed away. "All I want is for you to suck me. Is that too much to want?"
"No." I had agreed. "That's not too much to want."
"My drill sergeant screams at us, 'You are a bunch of fairies!'" Noel wrote to me. "And I always think, 'Yeth, thank you, Thergeant!' but I never say so, because he thinks he is being insulting. Besides, poor man, I pinned him when he was trying to demonstrate unarmed combat to us. He would find it terribly embarrassing to learn that he had been sat on by a 175 pound high school wrestling team fairy."
It was afternoon before the planes finally did arrive. They came in formation, white bellied, short-bodied cargo craft, without fighter escort. The runway sweepers ran off of the field. The planes began to land, one at a time dropping to hurtle the length of the runway. They came in quickly, one after another, spacing themselves closely. They had military markings. It took nearly an hour before all of the planes were down. It took longer before they could taxi and get to the front of the airport building. The sweepers had to clear a path for them and we had to wait. Only a few people came out of the planes and shuffled through the clinging snow, but one of them came to me.
"Here: passenger lists. You're the manpower and resources rep? Where is the relief society rep?"
"Where are they from?" I asked as I gestured at her.
"Quaow Da," he called over his shoulder.
I stared at him in consternation. Quaow Da? On the other side?
When I saw the men come into the terminal, I understood. They shuffled slowly, emaciated men in rags with fever bright eyes. Their uniforms had letters stencilled on them. The bright pale orange had faded under the dirt but I still knew the initials from photographs that I had seen. They were prisoners of war.
Manpower? Not these once young men. There was not a man in the halting file that was fit for work. They had been starved. They were young men who did not look like young men. They were skinny, spindly, emaciated. They were just as wasted as the corpses in the city morgue who had died of malnutrition or cholera. I felt my breathing come out trembling. This is what was left of all the beautiful young men from ten years ago.
I wanted to cry out in anguish. So many beautiful young men, gone. These ruined old men were all that was left of them. But I leaned my clipboard up and I began matching the names. They might be starved but they were alive, and more than that, they had been released. So I read their names as they came into the terminal, and made notes on where they should go. They were staring around themselves with amazed eyes. They limped slowly, some helping others, others tottering along.
I was supposed to allocate where they would go. I was supposed to put some names down on the labour roster and other names down as unfit. But they all needed to go to hospitals where they could be fed. They all would need provision for new clothing. Some of the threadbare emaciated men were even barefoot.
The rep from the relief society moved among them placing blankets around their shoulders. They looked at her and at the uniformed women with disbelieving eyes. In the prison camp they would not have seen women for over two years. The girl's lips were crooked tremulously as she wrapped the blankets around the gaunt shoulders and the line moved forward.
I wrote H, for hospital, after every name that I read. Then my pencil stopped moving and I looked at the name of the man that was next on the list: Noel Darlington. I raised my head.
Bone-thin, paper white, eyes dark stunned hollows in his skull, Noel stood before me. My skeleton was Noel. He was a walking skeleton, a living dead man, as wasted as if he had risen from a grave. It was unmistakably him.
"Noel…!"
I folded my arm around him and I clung. "Noel. Noel." I felt every rib. It was not a cry of joy or relief that greeted me. It was anguish in a whisper.
"Your arm! Oh Jesus, what happened to your arm?"
I could not let go of him. I held my skeletal lover locked tight. I was trembling, or else he was and the shivering racked both of us. All around us the voices murmured, awed and joyful for us. "Brothers. They must be brothers. Look…!"
I could not let him go. I did not let him go. How I finished my work, I don't know, because I kept hold of him, and he of me. I wrote the names all down. We got the men into the trucks. I kept Noel at my side. I would not send him to the hospital and lose him again. No! I was fierce in my determination to keep him. He rode in the cab of the truck with me, with my great coat covering his thin uniform.
"You lived," he whispered. "You did. You lived for me."
The driver dropped us off in front of my building. She could do no more for us. Her face was crinkled almost tearfully at the sight of us. She took a detour of many streets to bring us home.
"Good luck. Good luck with him," she called.
It was dusk then, feather light snow dropping in the blue twilight. I held Noel on his feet. By then he was beyond walking. Ahead of us the windows gleamed with light, one candle in the window of each room, tall and white, haloed by the melted frost on the window. My neighbours had bought Mrs. Keitch's candles and lit them to shine for Christmas. Only my window on the top floor was still dark.
I carried Noel in under the boughs. The stairs defeated me. He weighed so little. Under my greatcoat, there was nothing there to fill a pair of arms. But I had only one arm to hold him. It was too much. I dragged him up, step by step, our boots clattering. It was hard.
The noise brought out my neighbours into the dim stairwell; the old couple peering down from above, the two children clinging to the railings, Mrs. Keitch and the old man from the ground floor.
"What is it?"
"He's come home."
They didn't care who or what Noel was to me, only that he was a lost soldier, come back at last. They brought him upstairs for me. Their many arms caught us both and tugged us upward.
"A prisoner exchange in time for Christmas!"
The heater in my room was purring. I felt the warmth on my cheeks as we got in. It must have been rumbling away for a long while already to make the room so warm.
"He's so thin, poor man!" They eased Noel into my bed.
"Wait," I said. "Thank you." I dug in the sleeve of my greatcoat and brought out the oranges. "For you. Thank you."
They stayed in my room, helping, clustered around my great joy. "Happy Christmas, Mr. Anthoni!" the smaller child fluted in her shrill voice. The sweet acid smell of orange peel filled the air. Mrs. Keitch brought up her chicken, golden roasted with crisp fat, and shared it with us all. The children's mother had wrapped small dolls for them in tissue paper. They opened them in my room and shared their delight with us. The old man from the ground floor had chocolates, wrapped in foil, to share. All those faces glowed with smiles as they celebrated what I had gotten back.
I kept Noel pressed up against me, feeding him segments of orange and slivers of chicken. He smiled and kissed my fingers. He kept his cheek pressed against my side. Unbelievably, with so many people in it, the room became warm and we shed our scarves and shawls and sweaters. Even Noel's cold skin became warm, with my blankets wrapped around him.
After they were gone, Noel, worn out, slept under my arm. perfectly warm, and I lay awake in the dark beside him. I did not need to sleep. My mind ran over everything that I would need to do to keep him and to get him strong again. It would be difficult to get enough extra food; I would find a way to do it. I was confident. I would restore him to himself again.
No more dreams. The skeleton had come. I kissed him. I would never dream that the skeleton was coming for me again, because now I had him and I would keep him forever. Far off in the dark, I heard a church bell pealing the hour. It rang twelve times for midnight. It was Christmas Day. Snow covered the rubble of the city in a soft blanket. My room was perfectly warm and my lover was in my bed. I closed my eyes. Noel.

Continue reading..

Information Lonely night
Posted by: WMASG - 12-26-2025, 10:14 AM - No Replies

Three hours, a final exam in political science, two liters of Mt. Dew, and a Ritalin later, I'm wide awake and bored to tears. My cheek rests on the cool metal of the desk in my bedroom as I watch the movements of an ant crawling across my keyboard. The cocktail of stimulants—the water coursing through my veins—has turned my mind into a laser beam. That was my intention, so I could write five to seven pages on democratic socialism. But now I think that wasn't such a good idea, because now all I can do is think.
I look around my room, searching for something to occupy my mind for the next five hours, since sleep isn't an option. My first impulse is to sit down in front of my GameCube and see if I can set a new time record for beating Wind Waker, but then I remember I sold it last week. I needed the money, and it's a bigger distraction than I need during final exams this week.
Then I think about reading, but this suggestion is quickly dismissed, because there must be something more entertaining.
I sit up and stare at my computer screen. I've been staring at this damn thing for three hours. It's an old monitor, at least thirteen years old. It came with the Windows 3.1 computer my mother bought in '92. It was top-of-the-line back then. Now its resolution is terrible, and it turns pink if it stays on too long, like now. It's just one in a long list of things that need replacing in my life.
But it's three in the morning, so I think, "What the hell?" I grab the mouse and open a game of solitaire.
I'm going back to a simpler time as I move the black seven to the red eight, back to a time when this game was the pinnacle of the most advanced technology on the planet. Or at least, that's what my parents told me it was. They don't believe in video games, the way people don't believe in same-sex marriage or gun control or dwarf tossing. They convinced me that solitaire was the pinnacle of technological progress, and I believed them.
So I laid my heart on the line and wanted to become the best solitaire player I could be. I never became better than most people, but I had developed little strategies for winning and saw patterns in the cards, guessing their secrets and predicting their moves. And I was convinced that there were solitaire gods who would grant me a high score if I was in their favor, or who would prevent me from getting all the cards I needed while laughing sadistically.
The gods find me worthy, and I finish with a score of 580. Not bad for me. I usually don't accept anything below 520. But the idea of ​​solitaire quickly bores me, and my vagabond spirit wanders off in search of a more fulfilling pursuit.
I realize I should put my political science paper away before I forget, so I sling my backpack onto my lap and start stuffing papers into it. Then a blue notecard falls to the floor. It's the note Chris had given me.
That life-sucking bastard!
He was the first boyfriend I ever had. We met when I joined the student organization "Queers and Allies" on campus, and we got along pretty well right away. He was a great guy and seemed vulnerable, and I was looking for someone to protect. After all, with my experience dealing with homophobes, I was more than ready to help someone who was in the same boat.
But Chris didn't want any help.
I don't know why I kept the note. Probably because it's the last thing he gave me. I still miss him. Even though I hate him, I still miss him. My happiest moments are when we go to the movies or play paintball together. I was so in love with him. And all he could do was hand me a note explaining that he "needed space" and that it was "best for both of us." If he'd said it was because I wasn't his type, I would have freaked out.
I begin to cry as the icy feeling returns to my chest, the feeling I had when I first read the letter. I'd always wondered if this was the feeling of death. I need to think of something else.
I'm opening another solitaire game.
This looks easy, and my thoughts quickly drift away from my sadness. I get two aces in a row. As I play, my thoughts slowly drift back to my youth, when girls had lice and boys weren't the focus of my thoughts. I long to be young and foolish again, so as if a stupid letter could cause me so much pain.
It's not like I insulted him. If he didn't like Halo or Naruto, or even hang out with my friends, he would have said something. And he didn't even have the decency to tell me himself. The harbinger of my pain was a three-by-eight-inch notecard with no sympathy or replies, just a declaration of the independence I now possessed.
"You know what? Screw him!" I tell myself. "Why should I want to date someone who doesn't have the guts to tell me how he feels in my face? I don't need him!"
But it was a lie. I need him more than I needed breath. His bright personality, his sweet smile, and his boyish charm drive me crazy. We were made for each other, or so I thought. But now he's gone. I wanted to be with him for the rest of my life, and now I'm left behind without happiness or hope. All I feel is anger, rage, sadness, darkness.
I close the solitaire window and begin to cry bitterly. I don't care if the game is over. I didn't care about anything. The only thing that truly mattered to me has been ripped from my life, so what else matters?
I recognize the noise I'm making and tense up. It's late and my sister is right across the hall. The last thing I need is for her to wake up and find me like this. I suppress my feelings and hold them deep inside.
I wipe my cheek with the palm of my hand and look for my next distraction, something to take my mind off Chris and maybe make me feel better. I decide on music. My mind is completely drained, and I don't care what I listen to as long as it soothes my mood. So I choose a simple 80s playlist and sit back until I forget everything that's bothering me.
I involuntarily open a solitaire game when R.E.M. starts playing. I've always liked this strange little band. Don't ask me why, and I don't have to tell you. "Losing My Religion" is first on the playlist. I like the song for the melody, not so much for the lyrics. But in my current state of mind, I'm finally beginning to understand what they're getting at.
They try to tell us that life is a shitty place and people have to deal with it differently. And some people assume that their way is the best, which isn't true. But we're all told that everyone has to do the same thing, so I can see where they get that idea from. Religion has nothing to do with God or churches or revival events; it's about the rules we make up for ourselves and then apply to everyone else. Schools, businesses, governments—everyone does it. It's just human nature, and I hate it.
Why do we have to be so damn selfish? I know it's impossible to stop. I've been there. I wish I could believe I'd managed it myself. Death, disease, and so many wars could be prevented if people would just learn to think outside the box. People are so stupid, and I'm ashamed to be one of them.
What? 435? That's a disgrace! How could I have done so badly? I must not have been paying attention. Only an idiot would score that low at solitaire.
I angrily close the game, walk over, and throw myself onto my bed. I know I won't be able to fall asleep, but it's worth a try. Dreams and black nothingness will be infinitely better than what I feel right now. I used to be angry at Chris. Now I'm angry at everyone else on this planet, and I'm slowly becoming angry at life itself.
I stare at the ceiling, feeling my tired head spin, hoping sleep will consume me. But of course, you can't fall asleep thinking about it. I get up and start doing jumping jacks, hoping to tire myself out. But that only gets my blood pumping, making me more awake and alert.
This is hell.
Wherever I turn, all I find is frustration, anger, and sadness. I remember feeling this way in middle school, when my face was covered in pimples and my ears were heavier than the rest of my head. But this time it's different. This is stronger. I knew the pimples would go away and my head would grow to fit my ears, but the darkness I face now is inescapable. I know Chris has left my life forever. I knew that no matter what I do, people suck, and I know that no matter how hard I try, I'll never sleep tonight. My body goes limp as I realize I can't escape my pain.
“Not quite,” I think.
The idea had always lurked in the back of my mind, but now it's come to light and is crystal clear: suicide. I have no job, I have no boyfriend, I have very few friends, and now I have no hope at all. The only question that remains is: "How?"
I could take out my pocketknife and slit my wrists. But I don't want to make a huge mess of blood everywhere. If my parents have lost their son, I don't want them getting a carpet cleaning bill on top of it. I could go upstairs and swallow any number of pills. But I doubt Benadryl and Tylenol would be a lethal combination. I could jump out the window. But it's no more than 15 feet to the ground, so any impact would have to be a direct hit.
"Damn it!" I think. "I can't even think of a good way to kill myself! Nothing in my life is going right. What am I supposed to do now?"
I'm opening a game of Solitaire.
As I sit here staring at the screen, my heart beats numbly. I think I'm emotionally overwhelmed, but I don't care at all. I let the ice demon scratching at my chest have free rein over my body. I'd much rather feel nothing than be sad. I know I'll never be with Chris, but it doesn't matter now. I knew people would always make me angry, but they didn't matter now. None of the world's problems, none of my friends, none of my family, none of it matters. Not even me matters. I'm just drifting through life, come what may. It doesn't matter if it makes me happy or sad, or if it hurts or not, it just happens and I just have to deal with it.
Everything I do is meaningless.
735.
I barely notice it. I think I see things, but in the bottom right corner of the screen it says my score is 735. Now, in all my years of playing solitaire, I know that to get over 700, you need to finish the game in one round, something I've been aiming for my whole life, but never before. Thirteen years of diligent dedication have finally paid off.
I sit there, staring at the screen, forgetting how awful life is. I don't have a boyfriend, but I can always find a new one. And people aren't so horrible and repulsive after all. The icy feeling in my heart lifts, replaced by warm self-satisfaction. I let go of my anger and resentment. I feel like a child again, young and foolish.
But it's still 5:30 in the morning, and my next class doesn't start until 10:00. So I tell the computer to give me a new game so I can practice for the rest of the morning. I need to beat a new high score, and I can't do it by just sitting around.

Continue reading..

Information Point of no return
Posted by: WMASG - 12-26-2025, 10:11 AM - Replies (1)

Chapter 1

My first week back at school was a little depressing. Not that I had anything against school, but the summer had been good to me and I was sad to see it go by.

Colorado is purely a winter getaway destination, so many summer trips took students out of the state. They probably appreciated getting a break from the frigid air and the 1,500-meter mountains on every horizon. And when all those students left, I practically had the whole city to myself. No lines at the theaters, no waiting for takeout, and far fewer obnoxious customers.

I was still working at The Movie Dome, but since half of our town's disposable income was spent in Cancun or Orlando, business was slow, and I spent most of my time meticulously organizing the DVDs on the shelves and reading Twelfth Night behind the air-conditioned counter. (James gave me the complete works of Shakespeare for my seventeenth birthday, and I devoured the comedies like crazy. I once tried the tragedies but only got halfway through Othello before throwing it on the floor and declaring, "Let me guess, he goes berserk and kills everyone and then kills himself." Even Shakespeare could be predictable, I guess.)

Business picked up towards the end of August, when the other high school students returned from their trips with golden tans and sun-bleached hair, but James was still in New Zealand. Following his split with Crystal in June (a mutual agreement, he emphasized), he declared he needed to "get away from it all," stuffed a backpack full of all his bare essentials, bought the bare necessities, and booked the next flight to Wellington.

He'd send postcards over the summer, sometimes with odd little gifts like a whalebone carving of a tribal warrior, but a return date was always his and his alone. Until then, the house, the Tacoma, and the DVD player were mine. I left the couch alone, though, out of some primal superstition that he might burst through the door at any second and throw me to the floor with a judo. Not that he actually knew judo, but a guy who loved pushing his brother around could have done that.

I knew about judo. Well, only five hours at that point. I had to quit taekwondo because it was too much of a sport and not the art I'd expected. I tried kung fu, but I almost let it dominate my life. I do like judo, though. It's simple; the physical challenge and practice consist of grabbing, throwing, and pinning the other guy.

Aside from martial arts, movies, and the male sex, my focus was on founding and running the first gay club at my high school. Not that I was really "out," but I wanted to help other boys who were even more hidden than I was.

Dawn, however, was very much out there. He was the frontman and probably the president of the club, and damn, was he gay. He was a skinny flamer with bleached hair falling in his face, a penchant for girls' pants, and impeccable posture. He had that slight lisp typical of a gay man and always a detached look in his dark eyes, as if he were pondering what it would feel like to see the hot, heavy breathing beneath that last sweet belly. He was kind-hearted, but a man so big that he really turned off people who weren't patient enough to put up with him. And no, his first name wasn't Dawn. He was born Seymour Goldman. But if you called him that, you'd find out what it feels like to get beat up.

I met Dawn at the Movie Dome over the summer. He got my old job when I became assistant shift manager. During our conversations, he mostly pointed out all the "cool" guys. When we walked into the place, we discovered we also shared the same sexual orientation as high schoolers. He was the one who had the idea to start the club, and I agreed on the condition that I handle the paperwork and he took care of recruitment and club activities. Since I was the only resident at the time, we used my house as our base of operations. We made a lot of progress after holding some unofficial meetings, and all we needed was approval from the student government to get official recognition and funding.

But the resistance did not come from the student government or faculty or from a community outcry, but from the scribblings of a pretentious news hunter who was brave enough to come upstairs to my study one afternoon.

“Kyle,” Dawn said in a sing-song voice, the one he used to pronounce almost every name. He opened the door to what had been Brian’s old room, stuck his head through, and asked, “Are you busy?”

I sat at the far end of the room with my back to the window, behind a hardwood desk I'd bought at a flea market. That, and the bookshelf next to it, were my only contributions to the room. The bed, the dresser, the weights, and everything else were exactly as Brian had left them.

I took The Taming of the Shrew to the desk and said, "No, what's wrong?"

He stepped sideways through the half-closed doorway and stood upright, with the posture one might expect from The Nutcracker Suite. That day he was wearing a white shirt with blue vertical stripes, the ends of which flapped over his very tight jeans. “A reporter from the student newspaper came by and asked questions about our club, and I told him to talk to you.”

"Where is he now?" I asked.

Dawn opened the door with a jerk of his hand, stepped aside and stretched out his hands to see a stout young man on the other side of the door who was smiling the whole time as if he had just pulled a dozen roses out of a hat.

The young man tried to ignore the strange inferno beside him. He wore a grey jacket over a brown T-shirt and blue jeans, and had a black bag slung over his shoulder. He wore thick-rimmed, square glasses that were dark brown like his curly hair, and he seemed about as excited to see me as a snake about a mongoose.

"Are you Kyle Wilson?" he asked with icy indifference.

“Are you the reporter?” I replied.

“My name is Barton White,” he said, stepping out the door and grabbing a chair from the foot of Brian’s bed and pulling it up to my desk. He sat down and said, “I’ve been assigned to cover the new clubs that have opened this year, of which The Closet Club is one.”

Completely out of the picture, Dawn turned on her heel and floated back down, leaving me with the grim-looking Barton White.

“Are you having problems with the location?” I asked.

“It’s a bit off the beaten track, which doesn’t bother me,” he replied. “I’d rather not be seen here.”

"You don't seem very enthusiastic about your task," I said.

“Unofficially, I think you’re gay.” “The club is an insult to our school,” he explained, looking coldly into my eyes. “They’ve managed to defraud taxpayers of school fees, fueling deviance and promiscuity among students.”

“For the record,” I replied sharply, leaning forward and folding my arms on the desk, “one of the tenants. The special thing about our club is that it is not a dating agency or a pimping place. It is a safe place for gay students to be themselves outside of a society that is trying to free itself from the unknown.”

White's eyes narrowed as he stared at me and leaned back in his chair, as if trying to find a way to admonish me without jeopardizing his interview. He admitted defeat and instead reached into his pocket, took out a small gray tape recorder, and placed it on the desk between us.

“Do you mind if I end our conversation?” he asked.

“No, just try to keep it.” “I’m a professional,” I replied. “I don’t like discussing sexual ethics with people.”

White grinned sinisterly as he took out a small notepad, opened it, and clicked a pen in his other hand.

“The Closet Club seems like a deliberately ambiguous title,” he began, reading his question from his notepad. “Why all the secrecy?”

"We didn't choose the name for secrecy, but because the school board wanted us to choose a title that wasn't an explicit reference to homosexuality. The title is still clear to those culturally aware of what it means to be 'in the closet,' but it looks better on a business report than Queers Club."

"And why are we meeting in a house instead of on campus like the other clubs?"

"Being gay is a big deal for many students, and sometimes they don't want others to know. They still need to get used to the idea and need a chance to make sense of it. Sometimes they're afraid of physical or verbal abuse, sometimes they're unsure whether they're actually gay or not. We want to protect them from real problems and also avoid creating problems where none should exist."

"They are obviously not afraid to admit their homosexuality."

"Well, I'm not going to shout it from the rooftops, but I'm not going to lie about it either. I used to be very afraid of my sexual identity, since no one else in my life was gay and I had no one to answer my questions. But after finding many answers and surviving many embarrassing moments, I feel it's wise to share these insights with students who might not know where to look."

Weiss crossed one leg over the other and tapped his lower lip with the spirals of his notepad.

"Does he have any particular experience that stands out to you?"

"Come to our weekly meetings, and you can hear my story and the stories of other members."

"Are you ashamed to be gay?"

"No longer."

"Would you take it back if you could?"

"I can't, and no. It's not like I even had a choice."

I could feel his words boring into me, like a crow testing the vitality of a carcass. His eyes kept glaring into mine, trying to detect a weakness. Then his lips thinned treacherously.

"What about the boys you say are 'insecure'? Do you ever feel guilty about endorsing such a lifestyle for people who still have a chance to be normal?"

He found it.

"Normal? What the hell do you mean? What do you mean by that? That I'm some kind of freak?"

"Only in America. In Greece, I listen, it's perfectly acceptable to rape other boys in the ass."

"That's inappropriate!"

I leaned forward to reach the tape recorder, but his hand shot out and covered the buttons, forcing me to slide back in my chair. Our eyes never wavered from each other's malevolent gaze.

"Do you realize you're exhibiting normal human behavior?" I growled. "Because you're not. You're behaving like—"

"I'm acting like a journalist and you have a fit over a question you weren't prepared for. Although, excuse me for the last comment. It was unfair to the Greeks."

"What the hell is wrong with 'you'?" I asked. "Did you lose a bet or something?"

"I told you I'm here on assignment."

"Then Chris has completely lost his mind. If you want me to answer any further questions, please email them to me. But the interview is over."

“Thank you for your time, Mr. Wilson,” White said as he stood up, putting his recorder and notepad back in his pocket and turning towards the door. “See you in the headlines.”

As he closed the door behind him, I sighed in despair and reached for Sir Toby and Viola, thinking, "I'm going to give Chris a good thrashing for his stupid reporter."

Continue reading..

Information At the End of the String
Posted by: WMASG - 12-26-2025, 10:08 AM - Replies (1)

I was on my way to talk to Brody when the car hit me.
It was night, the roads dark and slick with ice, making it hard to get out of the way of a speeding vehicle. I didn’t feel much on impact, only an incredible force slamming into my body, as if I were back at the beach, trying to stand against an incoming wave only to be dragged into the undertow.
My body rolled off the trunk and onto the ice with a sickening crunch. The car slowed down, paused for a moment beside the curb, then sped away, throwing chunks of ice from its back wheels as it disappeared down the road.
“Come back,” I whispered, but in vain.
I lay on the side of the sleepy suburban street, at the corner of the intersection where the streetlight hung over me like a question mark, flickering orange light in short Morse code bursts. A light snow fell in random flurries, some flakes collecting on the tip of my nose, and then melting down my cheeks in cold tears. The blood pooling around my head started to harden and freeze my hair to the slick asphalt road.
This can’t be happening.
When we were kids, Brody had this magic eight-ball he kept by his bed, scratched up from all the times we used it to play catch when no other ball could be found. After a girl in our Elementary school died from an asthma attack, I got scared of my own mortality, so Brody shook his magic ball and asked it if he and I would live forever.
My sources say no, the ball said. Brody shook it again. Don’t count on it. Five more times it gave him the wrong answer, but he kept shaking it, until from the dark liquid appeared a reluctant It is decidedly so. “See?” he told me with that confident smile. “Nothing to worry about. We have all the time in the world.”
All the time in the world, I thought as my senses gradually left my body. Bullshit.
Never thought I was going to die like this. In my childhood, I had somehow convinced myself that death would be grand, or at least substantial in the scheme of things; taking a bullet for my true love, or holding my grandchild’s hand as my consciousness faded away in a hospital bed. Never like this. This was a newspaper death, inconsequential, forgotten the next morning. The universe would be ready to move on before my wake. “That is a rather pessimistic view of things,” said a voice from the darkness.
A dark figure emerged from the shadows, half-lit by the glittering streetlight and the pale glow of the moon. The blood that pooled around my body became insignificant as I faced an elderly woman wrapped in a heavy brown cloth. Her arms extended above her head in a circular motion, and in one quick moment, huge black wings erupted out of her back like a blooming rose.
She was beautiful.
The black winged woman knelt down, her bulbous nose mere inches from mine. Her breath caressed my face in gentle wisps. It smelt of crushed lilacs and hydrangeas. She spoke in a grainy voice that came through like my grandma’s old A.M. radio.
“Harbor Ryan, is it?” She knew my name. “Yes, you are Harbor Ryan.”
Her fingers combed through my clumped hair, straightening it out, gently picking out the dried blood and entangled bits of flesh.
“What are you doing?” I asked.
“Cleaning your wound,” the woman said. “It’s a bit messy.”
I squinted, trying to make out her more defined features; the network of wrinkles spreading from her eyes like tiny hands, her obsidian black lips, the soft gaze of her gold-flecked eyes. From some base part of my soul, I knew who this woman was. “Are you Death?”
She smiled in confirmation as she continued to work.
I coughed a laugh, sending ripples through my halo of blood. “Always thought you’d be a little more… intimidating, with hellfire and all that.”
“For some people, I am,” she whispered serenely. “My shape is not a definite thing. Sometimes I am an animal, a fox or an owl, sometimes an idea, envy or love, sometimes nothing at all. Whatever the soul deserves.”
“And what do I deserve?”
“An old woman to clean your wounds.”
Death told me to close my eyes, and I did without hesitation. There was a familiar warmth to her voice that compelled me to listen, to give myself over and let the tide pull me in. I forgot about the blood and the snow.
“Most people have something holding them down to this world,” she said, “like a tether on a balloon. It could be something material, a person, or persons, an unfinished goal. There are many reasons to want to keep living. I wonder, Harbor, what is yours?”
I smiled just thinking about it. “His name’s Brody.”
Her hand stroked my cheek so gently I wanted to cry. “Tell me about him,” she whispered.
I met him in elementary school. Third grade.
I was playing on the monkey bars by myself, as usual, when this soccer ball came out of nowhere and hit me in the back of the head, knocking me to the ground. It took me a few blinks and groans to realize what had just happened. Someone came over to see if I was all right; a black-haired boy with a hook-shaped scar running across his chin.
Are you okay?” he asked, looking down at me. At first, I didn’t answer, too mesmerized by the scar and its inherent coolness to register anything. Once the shock wore off, I asked him, “Where’d you get that scar?
I fell on the sidewalk,” he said smiling. “There was all this blood on my face. I had to get stitches.”
I never knew anyone who had to get stitches before. I stood up, not bothering to brush the dirt off my butt. “Can I touch it?
He held his chin out proudly. The scar felt smooth under my fingers, like a bump under a cloak of silk.
That’s awesome,” I whispered.
The boy picked his soccer ball up off the floor, and gave me a measured look. “Do you want come to play with us?” he asked.
I looked at the black and white ball, at the boys waiting out in the field, and started to panic. I was supposed to be the invisible kid at school, the ghost haunting the playground. How strange, I thought, to be noticed all of the sudden. “I don’t know how to play,” I said.
That’s okay,” he said with an easy smile. “Come on. I’ll show you how.”
So he taught me how to dribble the ball, how to kick it with the side of your foot so you can control where it goes, how to fake out the goalie. I was having fun, enjoying how easy it was to be with this boy. If I messed up, he’d laugh encouragingly, if I spoke, he’d respond like he actually wanted to talk to me. Pretty much the opposite of my parents.
“Brody was my first friend,” I told Death. “It’s funny, I never liked soccer. The only reason I joined the high school team was because of him.”
“He had quite an influence over you,” Death observed.
I nodded. “I was ready to follow him anywhere.”
Brody gave me my first joint. He dragged me to the back alley of our middle school, where the dumpsters hid us from the view of any passersby, kept looking around, as if at any moment a teacher would pop out of a trashcan and shoot us.
Why are we back here?” I asked. “It’s cold, and I need to pee.”
Shut up for a sec,” he said, his eyes still darting all over the place. “Look at what I have.”
From inside his thick winter coat, Brody pulled out a joint. He placed it in my hand.
It’s so small,” I whispered. Maybe it was all the movies I’d seen, but I always imagined spliffs to be bigger, and more… elegant, if that makes any sense. What I held it my hand was a small, papery stick that was odorless and lighter than air. It may not have been all I’d imagined, but still sent excited shivers through my body. “Where did you get it?” I asked in awe.
Swiped it from Avery’s locker,” Brody said with a wicked grin. “The fool doesn’t even realize half the school knows his combination.” I thumbed the end of the spliff, where it twisted closed like a screw. “What do we do now?
Hold on,” he said. He dug a pink plastic lighter from the front pocket of his jeans, struck the trigger a few times until a steady flame danced off the tip, and told me to hold out the joint. I did, and he waved the flame underneath the tip until it began to glow orange. A wisp of smoke rose from the joint’s mouth. “So, who goes first?” he asked.
You found it,” I said, holding the stick out to him. “You do it.”
Brody hesitated for a moment, then plucked the spliff from my hand and gingerly placed it between his lips. He sucked on it like he was drinking a milkshake through a straw, swallowing down the smoke. Color fled his face and in moments, he was on all fours, coughing and hacking. “Your turn,” he said, wiping spit from his lips.
As soon as I reached for the joint, someone cleared their throat behind me. A janitor was standing between the dumpsters, holding a trash bag. He dropped the bag, took the spliff from my hand, crushed it beneath his boot, and said, “Come with me.”
Principal Yeardley looked like he was about to fall asleep as he lectured us on peer pressure and burnouts, a hint of annoyance spreading across his face as Brody kept coughing during his speech. When Brody threw up on the carpet, I burst out laughing. Mr. Yeardley sighed and said our parents would be contacted.
“We got a week’s suspension for that,” I said. “First time I ever got in so much trouble. It was kind of exciting, almost like I had come of age.”
“Were you at all angry with him for the trouble he got you into?”
“A little.” I shrugged best I could in my position, frozen to the ground. “My dad gave me a few bruises for the principal’s phone call, Mom just watched as he hit me. I never told Brody what my parents did. I guess I figured the pain was worth it, just to be his friend.” I smiled ruefully. “Was that as pathetic as it sounded?”
Death shook her head. “Harbor, at this point, there is no such thing as pathetic, or stupid, or thoughtless. There is only ‘what was’, and that is something no adjective can describe. Everyone’s past is so specific, and so peculiar, there are no standards to set it by. You were suspended from school, your father beat you, you moved on, and that’s all.”
I laughed in between bloody coughs. “Simple as that?”
“Simple as that.” She smiled with such warmth, made me feel as though I were in a cradle again. “Please continue,” she said. During our suspension from school, Brody and I played soccer nonstop. Living in this podunk town there was nothing else to do but play soccer. There was a wide field out behind the townhouse projects, completely flat, as if run over by a pack of steamrollers. We’d play there for hours, only stopping when our legs went numb.
Time slowed down that week. We were isolated, like an air bubble floating in the middle of the ocean. That isolation, from responsibility and from school, had a weird effect on Brody. He’d get this far away look in his eyes as he dribbled the ball between his feet, and would start talking about the future.
Do you know what you want to do after graduation?” he asked me.
No,” I said, caught off guard by the question. “Why? Do you?
Kind of.” He balanced the ball on his head. “I want to get out of here, go somewhere far away.”
How far?
Brody smiled, then shrugged. “Anywhere. You’re going to think I’m nuts when I say this, but sometimes, when I wake up early in the morning, just before the sun is about to rise, I get this feeling in my chest, this thump thump thump, like a beating drum. It’s as if my heart is telling me I’m meant to do something big, like… climb a volcano, or save an orphanage.”
You sure it wasn’t heartburn?” I asked.
I’m sure,” he said with his usual confidence. “I have big plans, Harbor. The last thing I want is to be stuck here. All I have to do is find a way out.” He eyed me cautiously. “You’ll help me, right?
I punched him in the arm. “You go, I go.”
He ruffled my hair with a laugh. “Then let’s go.”
“It’s weird,” I said to Death, “You think you’re going to be someone’s friend forever, but at the same time you know nothing lasts forever. It’s this contradiction in your mind that you know exists, but you don’t really acknowledge it, hoping that you’ll be the exception. But everything ends, no matter what.”
Our friendship was no different. The cracks appeared in the strangest places.
We were playing soccer with some other guys from school in Charnon Park when this group of high school girls sat down on the bleachers and started whistling at us. One of them winked at me and giggled. Some of the guys waved or hollered back, but I kept my head down and continued playing. Brody did too, but I could tell he was distracted.
A week later, he came into my bedroom, smiling this bizarre smile, like he wasn’t sure why he was smiling. He pulled a magazine out of his backpack, a Playboy.
Found it under my dad’s bed,” he said. We flipped through it together on the floor, staring at the dozens of naked women smiling back at us, their breast popping out of the page and into our eyes. Brody’s face got closer and closer to the magazine with every turn of the page. He started to rub himself through his jeans.
I pretended not to notice, instead staring intently at one of the model’s dark nipples, wondering when I was going to ‘get it’.
The moment I ‘got it’ came a few weeks later.
In the locker room, as Brody talked to Avery about some girls in their World History class, my eyes began to wander down the aisle, where a guy I didn’t know was undressing. He unbuttoned his flannel shirt, all the way down, revealing his smooth, rippled stomach. I watched in a mesmerized curiosity as his fingers wrapped around the slender waist of his shorts and pulled down.
A fire ignited in my heart, causing my blood to boil and my breath to quicken, and all I could think about was what it would feel like to brush my hand against his skin. The confusion made me nauseas, like there was some small, crazed animal clawing its way out of my stomach.
That was when Brody’s hand slapped the back of my head.
Were you listening at all?” he asked. When I didn’t respond, he put his hand on my shoulder. “Hey, are you alright?
It was a simple contact. He’d touched my shoulder before, but it was different now, almost like he was trespassing on sacred ground. I needed to get away from him.
Don’t touch me,” I yelled, shoving him into the wall of lockers. All the combination locks trembled under the force of his body. Someone started chanting “Fight”, and others crowded around.
Brody looked like I had kicked him in the balls. “What did I do?
I opened my mouth to tell him exactly what he did, only to realize he didn’t do anything. It was all me. Before I could apologize, someone shoved me toward him. I probably looked menacing since Brody threw his fist into my face without any hesitation. Shaking off the pain, I jumped onto him, punching at his sides, kicking at him with my knees. The cheers were deafening as we wrestled on the bleached locker room floor. All the while, I kept thinking about how close our bodies were.
It took a few minutes for a gym teacher to come and break us up.
“That was a strange day,” I said.
“Did you have feelings for Brody?”

Continue reading..

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