I walked with
my head half down and my mind running in overdrive to understand what was
happening to me. He was nice, but what if he knew all about me? What if he knew
I saw a shrink twice a week cause I hadn't spoken a bit of real conversation in
more than six months? And what if he knew that for the first time in all that
time, I had really wanted to say something to him, and I couldn't. I stopped in
the hallway; eyes watering and I heard Greg next to me.
"Jake?
Wait up, you ok?" He said. He sounded genuinely concerned. I wiped my eyes
and looked at he and Mark, and even Mark seemed to be mildly concerned.
"1985!"
I blurted, surprising myself.
"What?"
Greg asked, plainly amazed that I had spoken yet again.
"The
Royals. 1985." I said before walking away quickly to my class. Very nice,
maybe I could try complete sentences next time. What next time I asked myself,
he probably thinks you're a basket case, and he's right. At least he'll leave
me alone now. On to first period.
First period
was English and it was a class I normally enjoyed, however my teacher seemed to
make a point of English being uncomfortable. Like a root canal. I took my seat
and watched the other kids file in to take their chairs. There was no seating
chart, so you just sat when you came in. I always got there quickly so I could
sit near the front and not get disturbed. I also didn't have to deal with kids
a lot.
"Hi,
dickhead." Ron said taking the seat next to me. I felt my heart speed with
the realization that he was sitting here to antagonize me. I stared straight
ahead. The teacher took her place at the front of the room and seemed to be mildly
surprised to find Ron near the front. Her wig was poorly fixated that day, and
hung at a drunken angle to the right. It was not hard to see why she commanded
little to no respect. She began to orate about Edgar Allen Poe's Telltale
Heart. As she spoke and then gradually had others read and I began to apply the
story to myself. What was my heart doing? True enough I had thought of Greg
before, or his image at least for I knew little of the person. I have found it
to be a good rule of thumb to not attempt to reach for the impossible. I had
dreamt of doing... Things with him. They weren't clear in my head, these acts,
but they were like clouds. Pleasurable, even if tenuous. I returned my
attention to the classroom with some difficulty, leaving Greg in my mind.
Mrs. Washington
had a strange system of reading aloud; the person that read the first paragraph
would finish and call on someone else. Someone called on Ron, which was amusing
because we all knew he didn't like to and so normally promised to kick someone's
ass for doing do. In fact, a small group went 'ooooh' when he was called upon.
He acted as if he read everyday and when he reached the end of his paragraph
she told him to call on someone to read.
"I pick
Jake." He said, smug smile on his face. The class looked at me, to a one.
Mrs. Washington stepped in quickly.
"Not funny
Ron. Choose someone else."
"But
that's not fair, Jake never has to read out loud. Can't he talk?"
"It's none
of your affair. Mickey, please start where Ron finished."
Mickey Terrell
started to read but Ron glared malevolently at me. I tried to ignore him, but
it was really hard. I lost my place in the story as I felt I could hear my
heart racing with fear over what Ron might do to me for escaping his trap. He
continued to stare and I shifted uncomfortably on my seat under that awful
gaze. This day was getting more difficult as it went on, why was I the focus of
so many today?
The story was
completed and Mrs. Washington informed us there would be a test tomorrow, so to
read it again. I knew I would have to; I hadn't gotten anything out of it at
all. The bell rang signaling the end of first period and I was already feeling
like this was going to be one of those days. Ron bumped me on my way out the
door, and my books fell to the floor. I bent in silence to retrieve them and
heard their receding laughter echoing down the hall. I trudged to my locker to
exchange my books. I dialed my combination and opened the locker, a very
Spartan locker it was too. Beings as it were spring I didn't have a coat in
there, just books in the bottom. The shelf at the top had some supplies, a
pencil and a few pens along with spare writing tablets. I grabbed my Math book
and notebook and swung my locker shut. I started as the closing of the door revealed
Greg standing behind it, leaning on the locker next to mine.
"Hey.
Thanks for that tip about the Royals today, I just knew Mark had to be
bullshitting me cause he knows the Royals are my favorite team." He
flashed his toothy grin and I felt a sudden lightness in my chest and a twitch
in my stomach. I nodded at him and turned to go to Math.
"So
hey," He said falling into step with me, "You know a lot about
baseball?" He asked.
What was going
on? He was all over me today, talking and really making an effort. I stopped
dead, the warm lightness advancing in my chest and I knew I was blushing, and
my stomach continued to toss and turn. I turned and headed for the Nurses
office. I must be sick I reasoned.I felt a hand on my shoulder and stopped, knowing in my gut that it was Greg, and
that when he touched me my heart had joined my stomach, toss for toss and turn
for turn. He stood in front of me and looked into my face.
"Jake, I’m
not going to hurt you, or make fun of you. I'm just trying to talk to you. You
know, get to know you." He said gently. My chest felt lighter than air and
my throat began to tickle. "C'mon, we'll be late for class." He said
and turned me to face the direction of our Math class. I wanted so badly to
speak to him, to thank him for being nice, to explain that I was feeling very
odd, that I might be sick. But those words would not come.
As we reached
the classroom he stopped me again. His touch made my shoulder muscles jump.
"Look, I
don't want to upset you. If you want me to stop just say the word. Um, well,
you know what I mean." He said, shyly grinning. I opened my mouth and
nothing came out. I coughed once and began to gag on the words I wanted to say.
Suddenly I wanted him to talk to me, I wanted to listen all day, but I couldn't
tell him! As I turned away in frustration my mouth, my traitorous mouth and
tongue blurted out unbidden.
"Sorry
seems to be the hardest word." I walked into the room with that
realization on my head. I couldn't say I was sorry for being so confusing and
difficult to be around. He had really made an effort and I blew it. I took a
chair near the front again and proceeded to shriek in my mind. I felt a tap on
my shoulder and I ignored it, but as on the bus, it was insistent. I turned at
last to find Greg behind me.
"Don't be
sorry, it's ok man." And he smiled and sat back in his chair. I turned and
faced the front in shock. It was ok? He was acting as if what I said was the
way everyone apologizes for being an ass. The instructor brought the class to
attention with the ringing of the bell, and I sat at attention. Math is a
difficult subject for me and I had to pay attention to get even the most basic
functions. The teacher droned and I found myself distracted with thoughts of
Greg sitting behind me. Again I asked myself why he was being so insistent
today. I had certainly never encouraged him, never spoken to him until today,
although god knows he had tried. Needless to mention, Math was a waste on me
that day. Come to think of it, the whole day was really long and so far very
strange. I wonder how many other classes I have with Greg? I found myself
thinking carefully and realized that I had him in at least four classes not
including homeroom, since that was just for attendance purposes. Homework was
handed out and I copied the assignment into my notebook, sure I would be lost
in figures tonight since I had missed the whole lesson. The bell rang and I
stood to leave. Greg fell into step with me and began to speak.
"Man, he
makes stuff so hard to understand. Like today, it's so much easier if you just
look at from a different point of view." I looked at him questioningly.
"Did he
lose you too?" He grinned. I found myself giving him a confused smile and
nodding.
"Look at
this." He said and opened his notebook and proceeded to teach me in one
minute what a whole forty had not been communicated from a professional. It
wasn't that the man wasn't intelligent; it was that he couldn't convey that
intelligence. My face brightened in understanding and he laughed, a musical
sound to my ears.
"You
should smile more, it looks good on you!" He said, and I was sure that I
blushed. "You know, more people should be like you, jeez! You’re a great
listener you know that?" He smiled again and I felt at ease, there was
nothing to fear from him and I felt some of my facade slipping, my bulwark
against the real world was tumbling brick by brick. And I found I wasn't
panicking.
We parted at
the second floor and I headed to my third period class, History. Well, they
call it social studies here, but whatever they chose to call it I was good at
it. The teacher gave many notes and that was a boon for me, as I thrived on
retention by physically administering the information to the page. We discussed
the assassination of Archduke Ferdinand and the Hapsburg Dynasty; more commonly
called the Ottoman Empire that touched off world war one. Strange that the area
of the fighting is in the present day Yugoslav territories, and that the unrest
in the area continues to this day. The whole scene and times were brought to
life behind the description from my teacher, a short barrel-chested fellow that
was completely obsessed with the New York Giants football team. A serious case
if you asked me, but no one did. I sighed, why would they. I'd probably say
something cryptic and so they'd wish that they had never asked.
History was
over far too soon, and isn't it funny that it always was the case for me.
Others seemed pretty relieved to be back in this century, but I had to admit
the past wasn't always a pleasant place to be. I left the classroom and found I
was disappointed not to find Greg in the hallway. I made my way to my locker to
dump my Math book and my Math and History notebooks. I headed up empty handed
to the second floor and the art room. Art I could take it or leave it; it never
really captured my attention. I took my place at the first table next to the
teacher’s desk, and was surprised that Mark sat next to me.
"Hey Jake,
Greg tells me you’re a pitcher huh?" He said casually. I looked at him
wondering how he figured that out, well actually, how Greg figured that out. I
guess my face is expressive because he laughed and filled me in.
"Greg
asked the bus driver this morning if there was a pitcher on Abbott and
Costello's team, and he said 'Yeah, tomorrow!" He howled with laughter and
I smiled at him. He was a lot like Greg I realized, his laughter was because he
thought I was being clever, not an idiot.
"Dude,
tryouts are today, why don't you go? Pitchers and catchers today." He
looked at me expectantly. I tried to answer, even though I was in shock that he
had even asked such a thing. I couldn't possibly, the interaction with people
would be overwhelming and I hadn't thrown in quite a while, although I did work
out at home so I wasn't exactly out of shape. He continued to look at me and I
cast my eyes down.
"That's
why I'm here in right field, just watching the dandelions grow." I said.
"I dunno,
Jake. Greg would be awful disappointed if he didn't catch you." He said.
I looked up and
my eyes widened.
"I mean
catch for you, you know, you pitch, he catches. He's a catcher you know?"
"Today."
I said.
"Yeah,
today after school. Whoa, dude, that was like conversation!" He smiled.
I shook my head
and cupped my hands in front of me mimicking a catcher and repeated myself.
"Um, I
don't get it... Today... Wait, if Tomorrow is the pitcher, Today is the catcher
right?" He said, obviously pleased with himself and his reasoning.
I nodded and
smiled at him, a genuine smile. How long had it been since I smiled that much
in one day?
The projects
were removed from their shelves and we started to work on whatever new
masterpiece was currently under construction. Mine was a plaster of Paris
traffic light, don't ask me why. I was to the point of adding paint and I tried
to stay in a circle, but it just wasn't happening. I ended up with ovular like
red, yellow and green spots where there should have been round signals. I shook
my head. I was aware of Mark next to me and he looked at the paint job with a
critical eye.
"I have
never seen a traffic light with oval shaped signal lights. Not that it wouldn't
be different, but..." He said shaking his head with a smile. I grinned
back and regarded my handiwork again. Yup, it sucked.
Mark offered to
help and he took a paint container and set the round bottom on the signal of
the next panel, blank so far. He then painted around the base of the container,
a nice circle.
"There,
that will work." He said. I shook my head. "Why not?" He asked.
I pointed at the blue circle where my yellow signal should be.
"Oops."
He said.
My next period
was lunch, and I stood in line to make my purchase. The food wasn't too bad,
despite what you hear or remember from High School. It wasn't gourmet either; I
guess edible would cover it. I stepped up to the first station, where you chose
your main course, and pointed at the pizza.
"It's
called pizza, dummy. That's what they call you when you can't talk, right?
Dumb?" Ron said loudly and laughed unkindly. A small group near him
tittered nervously as if expected to laugh. I sighed and moved down get French
fries. Ron continued to identify every food item that I happened on and finally
I was out the door and into the cafeteria proper with my tray. Suddenly my tray
was yanked from my hands and I turned to see Ron holding it and taunting me.
"C'mon,
dummy. Say please and I'll give it back to you. C'mon dummy!" He cackled.
I stood staring at him, mute as always although my nerves were just about shot,
the whole day had been one thing after another and now he wasn't going to let
me eat?
"Hey Ron,
want to try that shit with me?" Greg asked walking closer to us.
"Back off
coffee boy, go make a latte or something." Ron said, trying in vain to be
flippant and clever.
"At least
I have a job. Why don't you try and pick on someone who'll fight back, huh? Why
don't you quit being such an ass?" Greg replied calmly.
"Ok,"
Ron said and began to hand me my tray, "You want your boyfriends tray
back? You got it!" Ron said loudly as he covered Greg with my lunch. In
the blink of an eye Tom, Mark's brother had hit Ron in the back of the head,
and as Ron turned to face this new threat, Tommy laid him out on the cafeteria
floor.
"Tommy,
you shouldn't have done it man, you'll get suspended." Greg said, sadly
eyeing his clothes.
"If I
didn't and you had, you'd be off the team. Which is worse?" Tommy said. I
on the other hand was in overload and left the cafeteria in the confusion, and
headed straight for the guidance counselor's office. We had a contingency plan
in place in case I was overwhelmed; I could go there for a moment and calm
down. I stepped into the office and I dimly heard my name called down the
hallway somewhere, echoing down the empty passages. I stepped into Mr. Rockwell's
office and sat heavily in the padded chair in front of his desk, and I noticed
I was breathing heavily.
Mr. Rockwell
was listening to Enya, which I enjoyed partly because there were few words, and
partly because many of the words were in French, I think, so I couldn't repeat
them. I sat quietly breathing. I hadn't done this for a while, but thankfully
he didn't give me questioning looks or anything so that was good.
Greg burst into
the room, covered in my lunch and looked down at me in the chair. I shrank from
him as he dropped to his knees and faced me on my level.
"Are you
ok?" He asked with ragged breath.
"Hey, you
can't just burst in here, he needs some space!" Mr. Rockwell stated as he
stood. I was in shock to find Greg here, and I found his presence strangely
comforting. I raised my hand to wave off the counselor who looked plainly
surprised. He then excused himself to give us some space, and no doubt he was
calling my father with news of my progress.
Greg took a
seat in the second chair situated in front of the counselor’s desk. He looked
at me carefully, and I took in his ruined clothes and felt very small. If only
I had held onto my tray! If only I had walked away from Ron and allowed him to
just do whatever with the food, it wasn't like I was starving.
"I'm sorry
about him, I don't know what his problem is today. Ron can be an ass, but I've
never seen him this bad. Are you ok?" Greg asked.
I looked at him
in wonder. He said this wasn't my fault, he didn't blame me, he wasn't mad. But
look at his clothes!
"Under
Pressure." I said.
"Yeah, it
has been kinda tough on you today huh?" He nodded, and I did as well.
"So sad,
it's a sad, sad situation." I said, pointing at his clothes.
"Aww,
well, I guess I can put my gym stuff on kinda early, you know? Just clothes,
even if I do like 'em." He grinned.
"You've a
certain sartorial eloquence." I said, pointing at the clothes again.
"Yeah,
well cafeteria pizza is all the rage in Paris this year, I hear." He said
grinning. My stomach started again at the site of his smile. Mr. Rockwell
reentered the room and took his seat behind the desk.
"So, Greg,
can you tell me what’s going on?" He asked.
"Well, Ron
Matthews was hassling Jake pretty bad today, in fact it started this morning.
He stole his lunch tray and then threw his lunch on me when I told him to stop.
My friend Tommy Peron, he kinda stopped Ron from taking the next step, like
fighting with me or Jake here."
"I see. So
you and Jake have formed a friendship?" He asked looking back and forth.
Greg looked at me with a small grin.
"Well,
he's a man of few words, but he usually says the right ones so, yeah, friends
it is." I lit up on the inside like a lighthouse shining over a bay. He
said we were friends, that he liked what I said! I was beaming and I couldn't
hide it, though I wasn't sure why I would want to.
Vice Principal
Stephens stepped in to the room and sized us up. He asked Greg again what the
story was and Greg repeated the story. VP Stephens was also the baseball coach
for the varsity team.
"So, it's
your opinion that Tom Peron was trying to stop the situation from escalating
with Jake Tull? And that this targeting of him was something that started this
morning and has been continual throughout the day?"
Greg said yes
and then the counselor and Vice Principal left us alone for a minute to talk in
private.
"So,
listen, you going to try out for baseball today?" Greg asked me. I looked
at him and shook my head no.
"Why not?
What can it hurt?" Greg asked, pleading in his eyes.
"It's a
little bit funny, this feeling inside." I said, pointing to my stomach,
and then my chest, and finally over my heart.
"Its just
nerves." Greg said, but his voice broke a bit.
"Oh no,
I've said too much, not enough." I said.
"No, no
it's ok. You haven't really spent any time with folks, but you could pitch. Or,
you could try." He said softly.
"I can't
explain, you would not understand, this is not how I am." I said.
"Then show
me who you are." He replied. "Can't we try just a little bit
harder?" He said.
My eyes widened
and shock registered on my face. He had used a song lyric to communicate with
me! He smiled and leaned forward in his chair.
"I really
want you to try this, Jake. I'll be there for you. C'mon, what do you say?"
"Please
tell me, why? Why?" I asked.
"Human
nature?" He said laughing, recognizing the lyric. "I like you Jake,
you're not like most folks. I think you only speak when you have something to
say, I think you’re like a puzzle. What's that saying? A riddle wrapped inside
a question tucked inside an enigma? That's you. I think... I just want to know
you." He finished; gut there was something unsaid in his last statement,
something that was held back. Fear flew in my heart and I began to question motives
again. Try as I might to control it, it wouldn't give up that battle enough to
completely stomp it out.
The counselor
returned to the room and asked to speak to Greg in the next room.
I was left with
my thoughts and the terrible flip flopping of my stomach. What was I missing?
What had Greg not said? Was this all in my head? Was I just thinking too much?
Momentarily
Greg returned with Mr. Rockwell and Vice Principal Stephens.
"Ok,
here's what I'd like to do. Jake, you've had a tough day." He said, not unkindly.
"It's been
a long day, always." I replied morosely.
"Yeah, but
you have made more progress today that you have all year. Even if it is song
lyrics, and I know you hate that, I can see you trust Greg and you do talk to
him, and I have to say I like that. So here's what I'd like to do." He
looked from one of us to the other, Greg tensed and I have a feeling it was
because he knew what was to be said, maybe he was worried about my reaction?
"I'd like
you to go with Greg. He has to go to his gym locker to get changed, and then
you guys can go to the library or out to the diamond, maybe throw the ball. You
have to stay on school property, but we'd like to encourage this. Just for
today."
I was stunned.
I looked at Greg and he had a very hopeful expression on his face. I looked
back at the counselor and he had a similar expression, but different. They both
wanted different things from this. The counselor wanted progress, and Greg?
What did he want? I went back and forth in my mind, Greg or class? Well, I was
ahead in class so that one wasn't too hard. And it was true I found, that if I
looked into my heart I did trust him a bit, but I had that nagging about what
had gone unsaid. In the end, I chose to trust.
I nodded to the
counselor and looked at Greg to lead the way. He broke into a large grin and my
doubt slipped away like fog under the sun's glare. I followed him to the outer
office where we were told to wait a few minutes until the bell rang to signal
the start of sixth period. We only had two more to go through and the day would
be over.
At last the
bell rang and we went walking through the corridors to the opposite side of the
school, and descended the stairs to the locker rooms. The school had been built
in the 1920's and was red brick with high arching windows that curved into a
terminus at the top. The gym had the locker rooms built underneath it, and it
smelled like sweat, stale and masculine all at once. We walked over to the
middle row back towards the end of the wall and Greg began to dial in his
combination. I sat on the bench and waited.
"I think
it's so cool that they're doing this, Jake. We get to skip class and get to
know each other and it's sanctioned by the school!" He said excitedly as
he unbuttoned his shirt to reveal the stained tee beneath it. The grease from
cafeteria pizza surely has some lethal application that the Army is studying
even now. Greg continued to talk but my attention was focused elsewhere. He
crossed his arms and pulled up on the bottom of his tee shirt and extended his
arms over his head, pulling the tee over his head so he was momentarily
blinded. I stared and was sure my mouth had unhinged. His chest was defined, as
I had suspected, but smooth and lightly tanned with medium sized brown circles
around the nipples and pecs that stood out just a bit, enough so you knew they
were there. His stomach was flat and smooth, either he shaved or hair wasn't
allowed to play here, but I knew now what those tenuous thoughts were in my
dreams, I had new information for those pleasure filled moments when those
unknown acts were associated with Greg.
As the shirt
collar began to reveal his face I tore my eyes from their feasting, and felt
like a drowning man who just found out the cool oasis he saw was no mirage, but
was denied even one drink.
"So Jake,
what do you say I get a couple of gloves and we throw the ball? Sound
good?" He asked. I nodded in my trancelike state.
"Cool,
well why don't you get your gym stuff on too then?" He asked. I nodded dumbly
again and stepped across the hall to the other side of the same aisle and
worked the combination on my locker. My mind picked up on the sound of a belt
being undone and my mind began to wander again. I firmly took control of my
mind and refused to let it wander instead focusing in baseball and the pitches
that I had once thrown as I unbuttoned my own shirt.
I heard the
cloth of the jeans sliding down his legs and turned to face him involuntarily.
He was half turned away from me and I saw the inside of his thigh appear,
slowly rising to free itself from the jeans and then plant on the floor of the
locker room. If the chest was heaven, the legs were surely the pillars that
made it all possible. They were well toned and almost devoid of hair. His back now
mostly turned to me, the leg flexed while supporting the weight of his body as
the other leg extricated itself. The ripple through the muscle was
exhilarating, and at the same moment the ripple passed under the cloth of the
boxer briefs and the half cheek belonging to that side shivered. So did I. My
mind noted something shiny and my eyes once again tore away from the sight
before them to not the mirror on his door, and his eyes locking with mine in
it.
I turned
quickly and braced myself against the locker, embarrassment flaring in a bright
sunburst across my face. My stomach began flopping in earnest and my heart felt
like a bird fluttering in a cage too small, trapped in my breast. I heard the
sound of cloth sliding back up those legs and a shirt being pulled on.
"Hey, come
on, hurry and we'll go get gloves." He said quietly. I felt the first tear
form in my right eye and trace it's way down my cheek.
"Do I have
to undress you myself?" He asked suddenly. "Cause if your embarrassed
or you think you're going to ditch me, I'll do it." He said.
"Shame,
shame." I said.
"For
what?" He asked.
"I can not
put my finger on it now." I said.
"Look, I
know you are scared, but it's ok. I won't bite!" He said placing a hand on
my shoulder and turning me to face him. "Jake, really. It's ok. So you
snuck a peek at me, so what? If I sneak a peek at you will it make you feel
better?" He asked with a devilish grin. My eyes shot wide open. He
laughed.
"C'mon,
get changed and I'll go get the gloves, ok?" I nodded, and then spoke
suddenly.
"Do I
think too much? I know it's wrong, it's a problem I'm feeling if you’re
gone." I looked deep into him and I felt my soul listening to his, for an
echo of the sentiment. He stepped towards me and gave me a hug! Not a long one,
he backed off and apologized.
"Sorry, I
guess you just looked like you could use a hug." He said quietly. "Be
right back."
"Honesty
is such lonely word, everyone is so untrue. Honesty is hardly ever heard,
mostly what I need from you." I said looking directly into his eyes. He
stopped and looked at me carefully.
"Let's
talk on the diamond, ok?" He said, and I nodded in agreement. He left to
get the gloves and ball and I continued to change. I finished unbuttoning my
shirt and hung it on the hook in the locker, then peeled off my tee shirt and
hung it on the same hook. I reached for my belt buckle when I heard clapping
from behind me. I whirled to face Greg who had a small smile on his face.
"Not bad,
not bad. Now we're even." He grinned a grin I knew that I loved then and
there, and he left the room, footsteps echoing on the stairs back up to the
gym. I stood shocked and wondering what all of this meant. I reached for my
belt and finished getting changed.
After pulling
on sweats and a tee shirt I sat on the bench that ran down the middle of each
row of lockers. I sat wondering exactly where all this was going, what it all
meant. Obviously he liked me, but as what? And why? These questions raged in my
head and buzzed like a swarm of bees, and they were just as confusing as trying
to interpret a bee. I waited in impatience for him to return, but also in fear
of his return and it seemed as though it would last forever, as though this
long day would grow interminable. At last but too soon his feet pounded back down
the stairs and he had two gloves, one standard glove and one overstuffed one. A
catcher’s mitt. He smiled and beckoned me to follow him to the door leading out
the back of the school to the fields. We walked to the diamond and sat down on
the bench. I reached down to cinch my shoestrings tight and Greg sat still next
to me. I sat up and regarded him with a steady eye.
"What?"
He said.
I looked at
him, saying nothing. We sat like that for a moment or two before he sighed. And
looked down at his hands.
"Ok,
honesty I know. I know all about
your... Accident, and I know about the way you talk. And I don't care." He
looked at me. And sighed when he saw that I was still waiting but with my arms
held out questioningly as to how he knows all this. He sighed again.
"My dad is
Paul Caspian, Owner and President of Caspian Software Systems. I work there
during the summer. My dad keeps a picture of me on his desk, like a lot of
parents." He looked at me, "Like your dad."
"I saw
your picture one day towards the end of summer and I was shocked, you were
so... Different. Your eyes were so piercing," He gave a small laugh,
"I felt like you could see into me from your picture. So I asked your dad
about you. He said you were starting school and then he told me... Everything.
He wanted me to try and be your friend, but I didn't count on one thing. I
really like you." He said.
I was stunned.
I wasn't sure whether to feel angry with my father or upset about the deception
or happy that he really liked me. He looked at me carefully gauging my
reaction, and then he sighed again.
"Honesty,
right?"
"Always
and Forever." I said wondering what else could be said, what other
surprise could be lying in wait.
"When I
saw that picture I... I think I started falling in love." He said quietly.
To say I was speechless wasn't saying much. He studied my face for a reaction
then continued.
"Ok, well
you didn't get up and run, so I guess you aren't freaked. That's why I wanted
to know you and the more you would say something and stop the more I wanted to
see you through. Your dad says you were a great pitcher, he said you were funny
and you loved to sing. The more I see you the more I wanted to know you and
today." He paused and looked into my eyes, which were having trouble focusing.
"Today I
think I fell in love all the way." He said softly.
I stood quickly
feeling overwhelmed again, and trying desperately not to bolt, trying to find
the words. Someone was in love with me! The freak, the basket case and I
couldn't even say something! My nerves were like live wires under my skin and I
turned in circles having no solid direction in which to head.
Finally I saw
that Greg had not moved, in fact he looked scared.
"Don't be
afraid to be weak, don't be too proud to be strong, just look into your heart
my friend." I said, more to myself. And I listened and looked into my
heart and found peace. I found comfort and the strength to sit again and look
him in the eye.
"So?"
He said with a desperate edge of hope on his voice.
"My heart
can't tell you no." I said finally. His eyes held relief, joy and
compassion in one glance and I felt my heart soar. I understood now, I hadn't
felt sick earlier, I was falling in love.
The bell rang
inside the school and the last period was about to get underway. H returned to
me and put his mitt on and said with a grin, "Want to show me what you've
got?"
I took the other glove and followed him. We
stood about sixty feet apart and began to throw the ball back and forth. My arm
started to limber up and Greg was talking a mile a minute about the season
coming up, about the team and who was returning and who might make the team. I
was content to listen to him chatter away and felt completely relaxed with
someone other than my father for the first time in months.
At last he
asked me to take the mound and he squatted behind home plate. Being a lefty
gave me a curious throwing pattern, one you can't understand as a righty. Know
why? Cause only left-handers are in their right mind. Anyway, I decided to
start with basics and brought an overhand fastball. It was a little off the plate. He returned the ball and I set
again bringing the same pitch. It came closer, but missed to the opposite side.
He returned the ball again.
"C'mon
Jake, rock 'n fire, rock 'n fire." He said squatting again. Duh, I wasn't
rocking, lefty's rock back. I tried the motion and felt my body react as if
putting on a glove that fit perfectly. Or maybe like putting on a glass
slipper, at least in this case. I leaned back and let the overhand fastball
race to the plate and it flew true to the glove.
"Oww! Son
of a bitch that hurt!" Greg said hopping to his feet and throwing the ball
back. I began to go through my pitches like it was only yesterday, slider,
curve and then a screwball. I was really proud of the screwball, my dad and I
had worked all summer last year to get it right, and it broke just like it was
supposed to. I couldn't remember the last time I felt so good. I kept the
rhythm, rock and fire, rock and fire. I felt like a machine, exercising the
poisons from my system, flushing out the bad blood and the hurt and worry.
"Son,
don't move another muscle!" Came the voice of Vice Principal Stephens. I
stopped dead at the crowd of onlookers. The whole team, at least those trying
out were in evidence and they were open mouthed at the two of us.
VP Stephens
began barking instructions to the players. "Baker, first. Low,
second." And so on until the field was filled with a complete defense
behind me. Mickey Terrell looked at me in amazement as he took the third base
bag and Mark was smiling as he went to short. VP Stephens walked to the mound
and spoke to me, Greg was putting on his full catchers gear.
"If you
can throw like that you have place on this team, you hear me? I want you on
this squad, son. Show me what you can do." He turned and walked back
barking to the remaining players to get helmets for batting and form a line
behind the backstop.
I was
terrified, we had been in such a groove that I had lost track of time and now
it was stretching out again, I was in the middle of all these people who
thought I was a freak, an Idiot. No, a dummy.
Greg squatted
behind the plate and bounced on his toes. The first batter stepped in, and it
was Ron. He sneered and dug in, prepared to swing. Greg nodded and I threw, and
it went wild slamming into the backstop. Greg picked up the ball and walked out
to me.
"Hey, it's
ok." He said.
"Under
Pressure." I said for the second time that day.
"Calm
down, it's just you and me, no different. You pitch and I catch. Ok? Hey, you
are going to be great man, cause I love you."
My heart melted
under his gaze and I felt my confidence returning from the love reflected in
his eyes.
He trotted back
to home plate and squatted down again. Then he stood as Ron made a comment to
him, and I am sure it wasn't flattering. This fueled a new side to me, long
dormant. Anger. I saw Greg remove a small sponge and place it inside his mitt.
He then squatted down and bounced on the balls of his feet again.
"C'mon
Jake, rock and fire, rock and fire baby!" I heard Mark imitate the
sentiment and the infield began a steady patter.
"Rock and
fire, rock and fire." They chanted.
I rocked and
brought a three quarter fastball. Swung on and missed. The ball returned to me.
I rocked back and brought a curve ball to change speeds, and once again he
swung out in front. He moved in with frustration, jaw set. He stepped up to the
plate and began to crowd it. Greg called for a fastball, I shook him off until
he called what I wanted, a slider.
I rocked and fired, the rhythm pulling me
into a world where only Greg and I existed. The slider really flew and cut
inside hard forcing Ron off the plate. He stepped back a bit and then back into
the box a little more carefully, giving the plate some space. Greg called for
an outside screwball, and it was exactly what I had in mind. I rocked and fired
and the screwball cutting close then swung out to the outside edge of the
plate. Ron swung and just didn't have a long enough bat.
"Strike
three, batter's out!" Called Stephens.
We stood on my
porch in our gym gear, his mom waiting at the curb for him.
"So, you
surprised the way you pitched? I thought it was awesome." He said
energetically. It was true, I had done well in three innings of work I had
struck out eight and walked none. The one that didn't strike out hit a shot to
short that Mark smothered in the infield and threw the guy out.
"I am the
greatest of that there is no doubt. But not even I knew I could pitch like
that." I said.
My dad poked
his head out, and since he wasn't too shocked outwardly I guessed that Stephens
had called him already with the news.
"Greg,
stay for dinner?" He asked. Greg went to his mom and she drove off. He
came back up and stood with me again.
"Yeah,
you're a great pitcher all right." He said quietly.
"I am
nothing with out my catcher." I said.
"I don't
know that song." He said as he saw my retreating back in the doorway,
where I stopped and turned to look at him.
"Is that
in a song?" He asked with wonder in his voice.
I shook my head
no.
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