Deadly Nothingness
A Novel By
Joseph T.
Carrieres
Chapter
1
Descent
into Hell
Evil is never a mere abstraction; its most
terrifying incarnations are wholly human and intensely personal.
Though
she believed neither in Heaven nor Hell, Barbara Eriksson invited Satan to live
in her home. His name was Michael
Wilhelm and he was her father. Barbara's
mother Ann had died two months earlier and her hapless father's life had spun
out of control. When she had visited his
home in Baltimore a month after her mother's passing, she was shocked by
conditions in the residence. The kitchen,
living room and his bedroom were cluttered with dishes, food containers and
endless empty bottles and cans of liquor.
Michael had always been a heavy drinker, but his consumption had clearly
escalated. Barbara realized if she left
him on his own, he would be completely buried in his own filth within a few
more months and probably dead as well.
She knew
there was little she could do about his level of drinking, but she did have the
ability to provide a decent environment for him. He had never been a good father, but she felt
it was the least she could do. After
all, she was married to one of the wealthier men in the world and providing
creature comforts was simple enough--there were always servants available to
tend to every physical want. She consulted
with her husband, Lars, and he had no issues with the decision to move her father
into their house. With his usual
efficiency, Lars arranged for the move, had Michael's home cleaned out and
repaired, put it on the market where it sold immediately, then placed the
proceeds into his father-in-law's bank account.
Though she had invited him to visit
numerous times over the years, Michael had never been to her home in
Arizona. She picked him up at Sky Harbor
Airport and drove him to his new home in Scottsdale. The Eriksson home was a lavish structure
built in a Spanish Hacienda style. Lars
had given his wife complete say over every aspect of its design and furnishing,
and she spared no expenses. Located on one
hundred acres north of the city proper, the Eriksson's privacy was assured not
only by the size of the property, but also by a ten-foot wrought-iron fence
surrounding the entire estate, as well as the latest in security equipment.
They approached the home after passing
through two electronic gates, the first of which opened to their private road
off of Scottsdale Drive, the second leading through the fence to the residence
itself. Michael's eyes opened in
amazement as they stopped in front of the massive front doors on a circle drive
of hand-laid stone. A couple of servants appeared to handle the
luggage and drive the car around to the garage away from the house, a building
large enough to be a home in itself and which housed some ten vehicles as well
as motorcycles, dune buggies, a large boat, and several jet skis.
The two-story home had a massive foyer
floored with Saltillo tile and the room itself soared to the full height of the
building. Stairways made of intricately
carved wood led to the second floor on each side, while the door directly ahead
of them opened the way to a huge living room, which also rose to the second
level. The furniture and artwork were
pure Southwest and displayed Barbara's penchant for Native American paintings
and pottery.
She proudly gave her father a tour of the
residence. The section of the home they
were in faced north and contained the foyer, the living area, dining room, the
kitchen and laundry facilities. Built in
a squared U-shape, the building cupped a central courtyard dominated by a
swimming pool built entirely in a natural boulder style. The east wing housed a gym downstairs, a game
room and den while upstairs there were four suites with bathrooms, including
Thor's room and Michael's new dwelling along a central hallway. The second story of the west wing was
essentially dedicated as the master suite with his and her bathrooms and
room-sized closets for the extensive wardrobes Barbara and Lars required. Lars also had an office at the north end of
the wing, outfitted with every item he might need to oversee his extensive
business interests. The first floor of
their wing featured their library containing thousands of volumes as well as a
movie theater which comfortably seated fifty people.
The area south of the pool was
intentionally left open, with several pathways leading to over two acres of lush vegetation, trees and grassy areas
one of which was set up as a playground for Thor and his playmates and
outfitted with every kind of equipment a child could hope for, including a tree
house which was a small home in itself, fully furnished with electricity and
plumbing. There were no servants' quarters,
both Lars and Barbara, while not wanting to cook and clean themselves, also
didn't want their privacy infringed upon.
Apart from special occasions, all of their workers were gone by five in
the afternoon.
They finished their tour and had returned
to the living area when Thor wandered out from his afternoon nap.
"Hi, sleepy-head," Barbara
exclaimed. "Come and say hello to
your grandpa."
Thor rubbed his eyes and eyed the
newcomer with some suspicion.
"Look at him," Michael said, "The
boy is a little cherub." He
approached Thor, leaned down and pulled him into an embrace, which Thor
resisted.
"Now, now, don't be shy, I'm your
grandpa and I haven't seen you in a long, long time."
Michael kissed him on the forehead and
Thor wrinkled his nose in disgust. His
grandfather's breath reeked of something disgusting.
"You smell funny, grandpa" he
said in the candid manner of a child.
Barbara shook her head. "Dad, were you drinking on the
plane? It was only 8 am when you left
Baltimore."
Michael shrugged. "Sorry, I couldn't sleep last night, so
that helped a little. It wasn't easy leaving there, you know, especially with
all the memories."
She nodded in understanding and patted
him on the shoulder.
"Let's get you settled into your new
room."
Bringing Michael into their home had been
the right decision. A month after he
arrived, Barbara and Lars were discussing it before they drifted off to
sleep. Always affectionate, Lars was
holding his wife in his arms and lightly stroking her back in a manner he knew
was soothing to her.
"It looks like your dad is settling
in quite nicely; I have to admit I'm a bit surprised."
"Why is that, were you
worried?"
"I suppose so, especially after you
told me how he was handling himself back at his house after Ann died. I was just worried about how he would adjust
to being here."
Barbara shrugged. "Well, he's basically pretty quiet and
keeps to himself. He is drinking a lot,
but he doesn't start until the afternoons and he's never gotten mean from
it. He just winds down and ends up going
to sleep by nine or ten. He does tend to
get up and wander around in the middle of the night, but that seems to be when
he eats. Karen tells me she cleans up a
bit each morning from his forays into the kitchen."
"How about Thor? How is he adjusting? He seems to be awfully quiet lately."
"I think that's natural. Thor has never been good around new people
and he seems to be a bit afraid of my dad.
He's also just very absorbed in his private activities. When Jen's kids have come around to play,
they haven't been getting along very well.
Thor has gone into one of those phases where he seems to want to tease
them all the time--and you know how well he can do that."
Lars drew a deep breath and cleared his
throat. "Maybe this private
tutoring is not working out too well. I
think he just needs time to be a kid and have fun--this whole genius thing
might be overrated."
Lars had touched on a sore point for both
of them. Their son had begun speaking in
full sentences before he was one, and by the time he was two, he was reading
books at the second and third-grade level.
Now he was doing math and learning Spanish and his intellectual progress
was not just astonishing, but somewhat disconcerting to both of them. They both were concerned he would never have
the chance to simply enjoy being a little boy.
"That's been on my mind as
well," Barbara admitted. "I'm
meeting with Dr. Samuels this week, I'm going to bring it up with him. Our son has an entire lifetime to learn and
explore, but he only has one short childhood.
I don't know if I want to steal that away from him. It seems as though the ones who tested him
are far more anxious to push him ahead than we are."
Lars squeezed her. "If you want to slow this whole thing
down, I'm right there with you."
Neither of them yet knew it, but their
son's future was already out of their hands, stolen away by Ann's own father.
Michael had never been caught, there had
never even been a whisper of suspicion that he was aware of. He had been molesting boys since he was a
teenager, as he himself had suffered as a child at the hands of a
neighbor. He had proficiency for picking
out potential victims as well as a special facility for keeping them quiet
about his involvement with them.
The second he laid eyes on his grandson,
his twisted libido flared into full passion.
Whatever moral qualms he might have felt when he first gave in to such
desires had long since been completely extinguished, they were no longer even a
slight hindrance. The only reservation
he felt about this situation was the greater risk Thor posed than his many
previous victims. He noted from the
start the extraordinary intelligence Thor possessed. Without being obvious, he observed his
grandson's behavior in as much detail as possible. Within a short time, he realized Thor not
only had an innate brilliance, he was an accomplished liar and manipulator who
employed those skills without hesitation, often for no apparent reason or gain,
but simply because he enjoyed doing it.
He lied to his mother and father about
his daily activities, seemingly tailoring his responses to what they might want
to hear. They believed they had the perfect
son, so he provided them with that illusion and was rewarded by their
approval. Even though he often made life
miserable for his tutors, he was also able to manipulate them into providing
glowing reports to his parents about his behavior and progress. He tormented the house staff relentlessly and
with total impunity, seemingly realizing they couldn't complain to his
parents--though he would then tell his parents how much he loved the help,
often in their presence and Michael could see how they had to hide their
revulsion.
After a couple of weeks of such
observations, Michael was ready to act, the anticipation of the forthcoming
conquest already pushing him past any point of hesitation. Awakening one night after a few hours of
alcohol-induced sleep, he sat up in bed and poured himself a generous portion
of his favorite single-malt scotch while noting that it was just after 2
am. As he relished the smooth burn of
the distilled liquor down his throat, he knew with a thrill of certainty that
this was the night.
Thor awoke groggily, something nagging at
his awareness--a stench all too familiar.
When his eyes focused, a wave of fear swept through him. His grandfather was sitting on the bed beside
him, leaning over, his face mere inches from his own. He shrank away, pulling the covers tightly to
his neck.
"What's wrong, grandpa?" he
managed.
Michael stared at him unflinchingly,
menacingly.
"You're what's wrong. You're a filthy little liar and you're in big
goddam trouble."
"I don't know what you mean..."
Michael shook his head in disgust. "I saw what you did today. You climbed up on that counter in the
kitchen, stole some of that candy, and then lied to your mother when she asked
if you had taken any. Didn't you?"
Thor started to tremble and couldn't
respond. Michael grasped him by the
shoulders and shook him roughly.
"Answer me, you little bastard! You lied to her, didn't you?"
Thor managed to shake his head and
started to whimper.
"Shut up! Don't cry like a baby or you'll really make me
mad. You lie all the time and I'm sick
of it, do you hear me?"
The old man was pressing Thor's shoulders
deep into the mattress and he could only manage, "Sorry...."
Michael released the pressure and stared
at Thor with contempt.
"You're not sorry at all and I know
that. But you will be, because now
you're going to be punished."
"I don't want a spanking," Thor
implored.
"Oh, it's going to be worse than
that, because you've been really bad."
Michael stood up and Thor realized with a
shock that his grandfather was naked from the waist down and was stroking a
full erection with one hand.
"Now, I want you to touch me just
like I'm touching myself."
Thor's eyes widened in horror. "No, that's bad, I don't want to.."
Michael leaned down, thrusting his face
close to his cringing grandson's.
"You WILL do it, goddammit, or do
you know what will happen?"
The old man raised his other hand and in
it was a huge, gleaming knife. He ripped
the covers loose from Thor's hands and viciously gripped him by his genitals.
"If you don't do what I say, I will
cut your penis off and you'll bleed all over the bed. After that, I will kill your mother and your
father. Then I'll come back and do
this." He released his hand, then
slapped his palm over Thor's nose and mouth, pressing him back into his
pillow. The young boy panicked and
struggled for breath, but the grip was relentless. When he was on the verge of losing consciousness,
Michael released him and Thor sucked in huge, gasping breaths--but only for a
few moments. The helpless boy was subjected to the same brutal treatment twice
more before Michael finally relented and allowed him to breathe freely. Thor was completely drained and in
near-shock. He could no longer put up
the slightest resistance and Michael was soon coaching him into doing precisely
what the twisted old man desired. Later,
when Michael was finally satiated, he cleaned up, then came back and sat beside
the traumatized boy.
"Listen to me, Thor." The boy stared straight ahead without responding,
so Michael slapped him lightly to get his attention.
"If you ever tell anyone about this,
I'll let your mother know exactly what kind of liar you are. No one will believe you. Then I'll come back and do what I said I
would do. Do you understand?"
Thor nodded meekly, completely subdued.
"Good, because you better remember
what I've said. The other thing is that
your punishment is not over. I will come
in here whenever I want and do this again and you if you whine or complain, I
will just hurt you more. Don't forget
that--ever." That night was the
beginning of two years of absolute horror for the young Thor Eriksson.
The following morning, Thor awoke from a
troubled slumber to his living nightmare.
He went down to the kitchen and realized with absolute revulsion that
his grandfather was already up, chatting with his mother. He was about to turn and go back to his room
when Barbara spotted him.
"Hi, baby, what's wrong? You don't look well."
"I, I had a bad dream, I was
scared."
"Ah, come here, everything is all
right," she held out his arms and he sought refuge in his mother's arms
and started to cry. She was immediately
concerned because Thor almost never gave himself over to tears, unlike most
children his age. She lowered herself to
her knees and took him into a tighter embrace.
"Don't worry, honey, it was only a
dream, I won't let anything hurt you."
Over her shoulder and through his
tear-blurred vision, he saw his grandfather standing behind the counter,
brandishing a knife. He sobbed more
convulsively, but managed, "I'm OK, I'm OK," even while he felt sick
that his mother had invited this man into their home. Of course she didn't know, but she should
have and now Michael might kill everyone, Thor was convinced of that.
Months passed as the secret torment
continued in the Eriksson household.
Thor's misery multiplied as his grandfather's abuses escalated from
fondling to oral and anal penetration.
He began to numb himself for each encounter, deadening his feelings,
trying not to care. He was partially
successful in that, but only by diverting his emotions into a deeper anger and
growing hatred which slowly began to manifest itself in other ways. To those in the household, he seemed to
suddenly become the most introverted, passive child in the world. The staff and his tutors were delighted
because he became the most complacent child they could hope for, though he
apparently lost all interest in his academics.
He refused to play with the children of
his mother's friends, calling them "stupid kids." He spent a great deal of time alone, reading
voraciously both on the computer and in the library. He also spent hours in the back area of the
estate, exploring and hanging out in the tree house. Lars made special efforts to spend time with
his son, and Thor seemed to respond to that, taking to training in baseball,
football and tennis with alacrity. His
physical agility matched his mental prowess, and Lars was proud of that, though
he was often struck by the fact that his son was not yet even four years of age.
Following his dad's lead, he started to use the facilities in the gym, devising
his own routine which he followed with a "ferocious intensity" as his
mother put it.
Yet his mother was now deeply troubled
following a recent incident. A few
afternoons earlier, she had gone in search of Thor when one of the staff told
her he had wandered into the flower gardens near the tree house. She strolled back and rounding a curve in one
of the paths, saw her son bending over something near the path. She approached casually and his level of
concentration prevented him from noticing, plus the fact that he had headsets
on so loud that she could hear it from yards away. As she neared, his activities became more
apparent. On the grass in front of him
was a glass jar with the lid fastened tightly.
Inside were a number of bees and a crumbled batch of dry leaves. Thor was focusing the light from a large
magnifying glass on the leaves, creating a dense smoke which was suffocating
the bees. Barbara was horrified and
literally slapped the glass from Thor's hands, causing him to jump to his feet
with a yelp.
She yanked the earphones away by the
wires. "What in the world are you
doing?" She demanded.
Thor flushed heavily and struggled to
respond. "Just an experiment,
that's all."
She was indignant. "That is no experiment, young man, that
is absolute cruelty. I can't believe you
are doing that to those poor insects.
Let them out right now."
Thor unscrewed the lid and dumped the
contents. Only one of the bees managed
to fly off.
"Look at that, you killed almost all
of them. There is no excuse for this,
Thor--go to your room right now, and I mean NOW!"
The boy sprinted to the house. He felt no shame at all, merely unbridled
anger. Those were not the first
creatures he had ever killed, nor would they be the last. He would simply have to be more careful not
to let his mother find out.
A few nights later, Thor and his parents
were in the office of the boy's counselor and psychologist, Robert
Samuels. They had sought his services a
couple of years earlier when it became apparent how gifted their child was and
he had worked for some years with such exceptional individuals. When they had settled in, Barbara was
nervously shaking a crossed leg while Thor sat quite impassively between her
and his father.
Robert smiled and spread his arms outward
in a gesture of welcome.
"So here we are in a family
counseling session. Do you know what
that is, Thor?"
The boy shrugged and nodded. "I think so. It means everybody is worried about me
because I killed some bees."
Barbara frowned, but the statement
elicited a smile from Lars and Dr. Samuels.
"Well, that might be a small part of
it, but your parents are also concerned about other things. Can you guess what they might be?"
Thor made a wry expression. "Mom has said that I'm a lot quieter
than I used to be and that I don't like playing with other kids much
anymore."
Barbara patted his leg and nodded. "That's some of it, too, but I don't
mind that so much. You just seem so
serious now, darling, and I want you to have fun. You are almost like a grown-up in the ways
you are doing things now and I sometimes wonder if you're having fun and
enjoying life, because you should be.
More than anything, I want you to be happy."
"I like swimming with you and
playing sports with dad. That's
fun."
Lars nodded enthusiastically. "He's a hell of an athlete already,
Robert, you should see him throw a baseball or hit a tennis ball or the touch
he has shooting hoops. I've got to get
him started on golf next, he might be ready for the PGA Tour by the time he's
thirteen."
"Those are all great things, no
doubt," Robert responded.
"Still, maybe we should talk a little bit about something you
already mentioned, Thor. Do you
understand why your mother was upset with what happened the other day?"
He dropped his head and nodded in
apparent shame. It wasn't what he was
feeling at all. He had no idea why his
mother was so worried about insects that didn't matter to anyone--and it WAS an
experiment. He had been completely
enthralled watching the creatures die, wondering exactly what was happening
that made them change from living beings to dead little pieces of tissue.
"We talked about it, and I feel bad. I know that people sometimes kill animals for
food, but to kill them just to see what happens is wrong. Mom says the world is full of animals that
are trying to live just like we do and that it's cruel to take that away from
them for no reason."
The Doctor's eyes narrowed and he
observed Thor intently.
"And is that what you believe,
too?"
"Yes, I do. I wasn't really trying to kill the bees. I was more interested in the smoke I was making
with the magnifying glass I wasn't thinking about how it might hurt them and I
feel bad that it did. I won't do
anything like that again, I promise."
He said it with such apparent sincerity
that everyone else was moved to make comments of approval and praise and
Barbara's disposition markedly improved.
After some discussion about slowing down Thor's studies, Lars and Thor
left while Barbara lingered to speak with the psychologist.
"You're still somewhat troubled,
aren't you?" Robert noted.
"I suppose so. I mean, my first reaction after finding him
with the bees was thinking about serial killers who had started out as children
by tormenting animals and that sort of thing."
Robert laughed. "I think you've watched too many crime
shows. That has happened in a few cases,
but it's not the rule. All boys have
some capacity for thoughtless cruelty. I
remember shooting my sister's poodle with a BB gun when I was a little older
than Thor, and it seemed like a lot of fun at the time. I haven't turned into Ted Bundy."
Barbara giggled this time. "As far as we know. Maybe you have a secret life..."
The psychologist chuckled and gave her a
quick hug. "Now get home and stop
worrying so much. You have a wonderful
son, you should celebrate that."
The next morning, on the far reaches of
the estate, Thor watched in fascination as a horned toad went into its death
throes as the result of a large pin he had pushed through its head. A bit later, he observed black ants and fire
ants battle to the death when he dumped a cluster of the former onto a colony
of the latter. He was starting to
realize that death was nothing to fear, it was the final act of every living being. Using the same magnifying glass he had
employed on the bees, he watched intently as a squad of the fire ants overcame
and dismembered one of the intruders. As
he saw it succumb to the methodical and overwhelming assault, an idle thought
entered his mind: Grandfathers die too.
Chapter 2
The Good Son
Humans
have an unfathomable capacity to withstand the most horrific losses and still
move forward with meaningful lives.
As Thor
watched the last of the ant battle, another gifted young boy sat on the back
porch of a modest home a few miles away, his head cradled in his hands. John Patrick McDonough had just returned from
the Veteran's Memorial Cemetery where his father, Daniel, had been laid to
rest, one of the relatively few American casualties in the opening weeks of the
First Gulf War.
Friends and relatives were still gathered
inside, including his mother, Theresa, his older sister Gwen and his younger
twin brothers, Chris and Curtis. Now
that all the formalities of the funeral mass and burial were over, John wanted
just a little time to be alone in his grief.
He cried for a long while. When
the tears passed, he tried to pray, but found himself unable to do so.
As if on cue, Father Tim Adamson appeared
and sat silently beside him for long moments.
"You know, there are going to be a
lot of times like this in the next few years," the priest finally said.
"What do you mean, Father?"
"Quiet moments where you'll be all
alone, thinking about your father and missing him just like you are right
now."
John nodded, beginning to tear up
again. "I was trying to pray, but I
can't right now. I don't know why God
took my dad away, Father. Why would he
let this happen?
The priest shook his head slowly. "Johnny, I wish I could answer that for
you, but I don't understand it myself.
If I could give you a real answer, I would have to be God myself. The only thing I know is that I miss Dan more
than anyone I’ve ever missed in my life.”
"You were best friends like Willie
and me, I liked the way you talked about it in the sermon."
"Just like you and Willie. We went to school together our whole lives,
but then we chose to do different things when we grew up. Dan wanted to get married and raise a
family. I decided to make the whole
Church my family so I became a priest.
When your dad was killed, I lost a part of my family, too--he was truly
my brother." Father Tim’s eyes
fogged, causing John to begin weeping again.
They both succumbed silently to the sorrow before John finally spoke
again.
"Father Tim, what do we do now? I just feel so sad like I don't want to do
anything."
"So do I, and nothing will change
that for a while. But there is something
special you can do."
"What's that?"
"Be there for your family,
Johnny. You're the man of the house now
and they're going to depend on you."
"I'm only seven years old,
Father."
"I know, but you're growing up
fast. You are so much smarter than other
kids your age and you have a strength of character I've never seen in someone
your age--except maybe Willie. That's
probably why you're best friends. I don't
mean you need to go out and get a job and take care of them, but you need to be
strong for them. Your mom and Gwen are
having a very tough time dealing with this loss, I'm worried about them."
Thor started sobbing again. "Gwennie told me she wanted to die the
other night, Father, and my mom can't seem to stop crying when she's alone and
doesn't think anyone is watching."
The priest put his hand on the boy's
shoulder to focus his attention.
"Then you do this--I know how much
you love everyone in your family, but now they need your love more than
ever. Don't just tell them how much you
love them, Johnny, show them. Let them
talk to you about your father, they need to do that. The sadness about your dad will never go away
completely--but you can love each other more every day and that will help you
more than anything, I promise you. And
don't forget the twins. They don't
really understand what's happened and you are going to end up being one of the
biggest influences in their lives as they grow older. Be the best older brother you can be, they
already think you're the greatest person in the world."
The priest embraced him briefly, and then
left him to his own thoughts. He wasn't
alone for long before Willie showed up and took the same spot the priest had
occupied.
"Hey, Johnny."
"Hi, Willie."
"I saw Father Tim out here talking
to you."
"Yeah, he always has good things to
say, it helped. Hey, Willie, was it like
this for you when your father died?"
Willie shook his head. "Not really. I was only four and my dad was never
around. I was just upset because my
momma was crying so much. Your dad was
more like a dad to me than my real father was and now you're the brother I
never had before."
"You wanna walk down to the
park?" John asked.
"Sure, whatever you want."
"I'll let my mom know, then let's
head out." John was glad to have a
friend like Willie and in that very moment, in spite of all the misery of the
past couple of weeks, he realized there was hope ahead. He would not give in to the darkness that
overshadowed everything right now, he would fight it--and help his family fight
it as well.
John took Father Tim's words to heart. The funeral had been on a Saturday and his
mother would return to work on Monday morning at the hospital where she worked
as a registered nurse. Without being
obvious, he watched his mother's routine very closely on Sunday morning,
especially when she prepared breakfast and he noted exactly how she brewed her
coffee.
That evening, he went to Gwen's room to
enlist her help because he thought it would be good to get her involved as
well.
"Gwennie, I need your help with
something."
She was lying on her bed watching
television, but clearly not interested, still in a deep depression.
"What's that?" she asked.
"Mom's going back to work tomorrow
so I want to do something special for her in the morning to make it
easier."
That sparked some interest on his
sister's part because she and Theresa had such a close bond.
"What are you thinking?"
"Well, I watched how she made
breakfast for herself real close today, so I'm going to have her coffee ready
for her when she comes out. She eats
oatmeal and yogurt every day, so I was thinking maybe you could make that for
her and we'll make sure the paper is in the house and at the table, too-- we'll
get the twins to take care of that."
"OK, that sounds cool. You'll have to wake me up, though."
"No problem, I'll set the alarm on
my computer and I'll let the twins know, too."
The plan was carried out to
perfection. Theresa, who always ran
late, was in particular trouble on this first day back to work and rushed
downstairs after dressing to make her coffee and grab something to eat. All her kids were waiting for her, the table
set, the paper unfolded next to a steaming cup of coffee.
"What is all this?" she asked,
even though she realized at a glance what was happening.
The twins were jumping up and down with
excitement. "We got the paper, we
got the paper."
For a moment, John thought she would
burst into tears, but a huge smile spread across her face instead. We've
all cried enough lately, he thought as she opened her arms to hug everyone.
"I love you guys so much!" she
exclaimed. "We're going to be all
right, I promise. Well, if Marissa gets
here soon, where is that girl?"
The doorbell chimed in the middle of her
question, their summer babysitter had arrived, a cute teenage girl who was the
object of considerable affection on John's part, though he would never admit
that to anyone. John ran to let her in
before the twins could horn in. He
opened the door to be greeted by her winsome smile.
"Hi, sweetie, sorry I'm late, is
your mom mad?"
John shook his head. "Nope, she's late and still eating
breakfast."
Marissa went into the kitchen, the twins
immediately clamored for hugs, which she granted, then she went over to Theresa
and embraced her as well.
"I'm sorry I didn't get a chance to
talk to you yesterday after the funeral."
"That's OK, Marissa, I'm just glad
you were able to be there."
"Is everyone doing all right? I can't imagine how hard this must be."
"It is hard," Theresa agreed,
"But we're getting through it.
We're going to keep living and loving more than ever--my kids are
already reminding me about that."
"I love these kids," Marissa
exclaimed, "They are the best!"
"Yes they are--and so are you, dear,
thanks for all your help this summer."
After some quick hugs and kisses, Theresa
left the house and plunged back into her work life. John was happy to see Marissa give Gwen some
extra attention; she must have realized how much the young girl needed it. John busied himself with the twins most of
the day, though thoughts of his father were always running through his
head. As usual, Willie stopped by and
they spent some time playing video games with John's brothers before heading to
the back yard to shoot some hoops.
Mid-August seemed to arrive in a
flash. Theresa took a day off from work
to take Gwen and John to their first day of school at St. Catherine's grade
school. Gwen was beginning the fifth grade;
John was now a second-grader. Both had
gone to the same school the previous year, so they were excited to see old
friends. After she dropped them off and
started to drive away, the twins were hanging out the back windows, yelling and
waving goodbye. John and Gwen waved back
enthusiastically.
John was thrilled when his teacher
allowed them to select their own seats when they first entered class, and of
course he and Willie chose to sit side-by-side.
They would spend their entire schooldays making the same choice whenever
they could. Some years later, their bond
would generate hatred far beyond the conception of either child.
Chapter 3
A
Precocious Killer
Evil is often rooted in a desire for justice which
corrupts even those with pure intentions.
A year later, Barbara and Lars Erickson
were once again meeting with Dr. Samuels, this time with a new set of concerns.
"It's hard for me to understand
what's happening with him," Barbara began.
"A couple of years ago, it seemed like he was going to be another
Einstein by the time he was eight or nine, but now it's like everything has
ground to a halt, or even gone backwards.
We dropped the tutors on their recommendation simply because he wasn't
learning anything new."
Lars nodded in agreement, adding,
"But whatever interest he previously had in academics seems to have
transferred over to physical activity.
He can't get enough sports and he has become absolutely obsessed with
the martial arts--He even has a private instructor three mornings a week. I can't keep him out of the gym, either and
I'm really worried he's working his body beyond its capacity."
Robert Samuels listened closely as they
explained their concerns.
"I know you're both very concerned
and I understand that. However, one
thing we all realize is that your son is no ordinary child in many manners. The intellectual plateau he seems to have
reached does not worry me in the least, nor should it bother you. I've seen other cases where children show exceptional
abilities in their early years, then they level off as they grow older. Thor also seems to have just lost interest at
this point in developing those capacities, nor do I think we should push him.
As far as his level of physical
exertions, that is probably less of an issue than you might realize. If he's eating healthy and getting enough
sleep, his body will let him know when he's pushing it too hard and he will
just naturally cut back. I can't see
someone his age developing a full-blown obsessive-compulsive complex, though it
wouldn't hurt if you keep a chart of his activities over a couple of weeks for
me to take a look at--and if you wouldn't mind, get his weight daily for me
over that period as well."
Lars nodded his agreement then hesitated
before opening another topic.
"The other thing is the whole social
interaction. He has started playing more
with the kids of friends who come by, but he just doesn't seem engaged. There were times when he used to tease them
quite a bit, but now he seems more like a babysitter, even when the kids are a
couple of years older than he is. I hate
to say it, but he even comes across as seeming superior."
Robert shrugged--"Which he is, in
almost every way, we all know that.
Intellectually and physically, he runs circles around the other kids,
I've seen that. Yes, it might engender
feelings of being elite, but humility will come with time as he realizes those
advantages don't necessarily make him a better person. That's where having great role models like
you come into play. After all, Lars, you
are one of the wealthiest men in the world, but I've never seen you lord that
over others. Then again, that's why I
have no qualms about charging you top dollar for my services," he finished
with a laugh.
That sparked smiles from both Barbara and
Lars. "You are worth every penny,
Robert," Barbara said, "We're fortunate to have found you."
His parents and Dr. Samuels had almost
everything wrong about Thor. He had lost
none of his interest in furthering his intellectual pursuits, he had simply
decided to make them completely private and tailor them to his interests. He had been reading extensively about child
prodigies and had come to the firm conclusion that he didn't wish to follow in
the path many of them had taken, such as being in college at eleven years of
age and being viewed as a complete freak by one's peers.
His physical exertions sprang from
another source--rage and hatred--all directed at and caused by one person, his
grandfather. His fascination with death
had expanded as well. The torture and
dissection of animals had progressed to more complex creatures, including birds
and even desert hares. He was also
beginning to have fantasies about killing Michael
Still, almost all of those fantasies
involved the same kind of brute force he was using on animals, and he knew he
could never get away with something like that.
He had read enough about killers in society to realize he would always
be a pariah, regardless of what his grandfather had done to him. He was also still convinced that his
grandfather would carry out his threats if he tried to do something to him and
didn't succeed, so that also dampened his enthusiasm. The most enjoyable vision he could conjure
was watching Michael die of a heart attack, begging Thor to call 911 for an
ambulance as his life slipped away.
Just after his fifth birthday, Thor
overheard a very interesting conversation between Barbara and her father.
"So what did the doctor tell
you?" she asked, which immediately caught Thor's attention. He moved quietly into a position just outside
the living room where he could hear every word more clearly.
"Ah, this damn sleep apnea has
gotten worse. They're going to give me
some kind of breathing machine with a mask which I'm supposed to wear every
night to keep me breathing properly."
"It's gotten that serious?" she
asked.
"Yeah, a few times I woke up
thinking I was suffocating to death before I could catch my breath again. The drinking makes it worse, of course, but I
told him that's not an option. A man has
to reserve a few vices, even if they kill him."
Barbara shook her head in
resignation. "I won't even comment
on that, I know better. Still, it sounds
like the best course--I hope you follow through and actually use the thing."
"I'll do my best."
Thor made a beeline for the family
library and pulled out a medical volume, quickly looking up the subject. He realized that someone could actually die
from severe sleep apnea and an autopsy might simply indicate death by heart
failure resulting from the medical condition.
He carefully replaced the volume while his mind began to run at hyper
speed--especially if the condition were made worse by the use of alcohol and
drugs.
When Michael made another one of his
visits to Thor's room that night, the boy's disgust prompted him to plan more
quickly than he might have otherwise. He
had reached the limit of what he could tolerate from the sick bastard now that
a solution seemed to be at hand.
The old man's routine was completely
predictable. He watched television in
the living room every evening while drinking beer, then by nine he retired to
his room where he put himself to sleep with a bottle of The Glenlivet 12- year old single malt scotch--a
supply of which was always at hand on the nightstand beside his bed. When he woke around 2 or 3 am, it was either
to forage in the kitchen or torment Thor with his attentions.
Thor decided to act within the first
couple of hours after Michael fell asleep, while he was still intoxicated. Yet he wasn't sure how deeply his tormentor
might be sleeping and he realized he had to find a way to ensure his
grandfather wouldn't wake up. He knew
his mother had sometimes used a sleep medication called Ambien and recalled how
she had taken it one night after having a couple of drinks and that it seemed
to knock her out. Lars had carried her
to bed, commenting that she should never use the pills when she had been
drinking.
The next day, Thor devoted all his time
to preparations, becoming so excited he could scarcely concentrate on the tasks
at hand. When his mother was out
shopping, he went to her medicine cabinet and took out five of the Ambien
tablets from the prescription bottle.
Even if she missed them it would soon become apparent who had taken
them. He then went to the gym and
removed some straps and cords from several pieces of equipment. Finally, from the kitchen he retrieved a
large plastic freezer storage bag and took all the components to his room and
put them under his bed, except for the Ambien tablets. A bit later on, after seeing Michael retrieve
a full beer from the refrigerator and settle in front of the television, John
made a quick trip to his grandfather's room and with no hesitation dropped all
five tablets into the already opened bottle of whisky on the nightstand,
swishing it a few times to help them dissolve.
Thor then went to his room, sat at his
computer and waited for the evening to pass.
A rising fear gripped him--not of what he was planning to do, but that
he would somehow be unsuccessful or get caught.
If he ruined this, the thought of his parents' reaction was
terrifying. At nine, he undressed and
got into bed, fully awake and watching every minute tick agonizingly by on his
bedside clock. He normally was up later
and his parents were surprised when they came in to say goodnight. Both of them were always in bed by ten, and
tonight was no exception. After they had
hugged and kissed him and left, he waited until eleven before quietly leaving
his room, creeping down the hall and slowly opening the door to his
grandfather's room. He quietly
approached the bed, checked the bottle of scotch and realized it was now
empty. Growing braver, he tapped lightly
on his grandfather's arm, eliciting no reaction. He pushed harder and called his name out
quietly with the same lack of response.
Thor finally shook him quite forcefully and when Michael did not move,
he realized with a thrill of excitement that his time had come.
The boy ran back to his room, dove under
the bed and gathered the items he had stashed there earlier. He had
turned off the hall light on the way back to his room, and now carefully poked
his head out the door to ensure no one was around before sprinting down the
hall back to his grandfather's bedroom.
He entered quietly, afraid that the old man might somehow be rousing
himself, but he was in the same position as when Thor had left, snoring
slightly.
A wave of nausea and near-terror began to
sweep over the boy, so he sprang into action before he lost his nerve. The cords he had brought with him had wrist
and ankle loops for use on weight equipment which could be tightened, yet
wouldn't leave marks if the old man began to struggle. He slipped one onto each wrist and ankle,
then stretched out the old man's legs and arms, lashing them to the poles at
each corner of the bed. Michael didn't
show a hint of awareness. Thor
double-checked each cord to make sure they were tightly secured, then pulled
the plastic bag from his pocket with hands that were now badly trembling.
He couldn't hesitate now, everything came
down to this. He jumped up on the bed,
lifted his grandfather's head, slipped the plastic bag on it, then gathered the
slack around the neck, making a nearly airtight seal. Within just a few moments Michael began to
labor for breath, but there was none available.
Thor steeled himself because he was sure his grandfather would awaken
and go into a rage as he realized what was happening and he had to be sure to
keep the bag tightly around his neck, no matter what.
To his surprise and relief, Michael did
not even recover consciousness. He did
struggle weakly, vainly, his arms and legs flailing just a bit, but to no
effect. He never opened his eyes and
Thor suddenly found himself wishing that he would so Michael could understand
what was happening and who was doing it to him.
As his grandfather's struggles subsided and then stopped, Thor watched
him closely, waiting for the moment when all life drained from the body. Even after all movement stopped, Thor kept
the bag over his head for several long minutes.
He had to be sure. His mother had
taught him to feel for a pulse, and when that was completely gone, he removed
the bag and watched intently for another couple of minutes.
Finally, assured that Michael was dead,
he moved even more quickly than he had when he entered. He untied the cords, released the straps from
the lifeless limbs and placed them on the floor with the plastic bag--all
evidence that had to be removed. He
carefully picked up the empty bottle of Glinlevit by the neck, took it to the
bathroom and flushed it out several times--he didn't want any traces of the Ambien
to remain and who knew if the cops might test for something like that. Thor had seen enough crime shows to think
they might check every slight possibility.
In the drawer of the nightstand, there
was another bottle of the scotch, which John opened and then poured a small
amount into the original bottle before screwing the lids back on each and
carefully wiping the neck of each bottle where he had handled them--he wasn't
going to leave any fingerprints, especially on liquor bottles. He took a quick look at his grandfather's
wrists and ankles, there wasn't a mark on them, just as he had hoped. As a final touch, he folded his grandfather's
arms on his chest and pulled up the covers.
He wanted it to look like he had died peacefully in his sleep.
Back in his room, he tore the plastic bag
into small shreds and flushed every bit of it down his toilet. Then, using the stairs at the end of his hall,
he crept down to the gym and replaced each wrist and ankle strap and their
cords on the equipment from which he had removed them.
As he finally eased into bed, a range of
emotions flooded through him. There was
a strange sense of exhilaration, tremendous relief that he would never be
tormented by Michael again, and a huge anxiety that he had overlooked something
and would be caught and punished for what he had done. It took a long time before he finally fell
asleep.
The following morning, he rose early,
went down to the dining room and found his parents already having breakfast.
"Good morning, baby. Come give me a
hug."
He complied and smiled as his dad ruffled
his hair while he was in Barbara's arms.
"So what are you up to today,
son?" he asked.
"I think I'll go out to the tree
house for a while. I left a book up
there that I've been reading."
"How about we play a little catch
when I get home tonight?"
"Yeah, I'd like that."
"Great, I'll be back by six."
Nobody mentioned Michael, he always slept
in late then wandered down an hour or so before lunch to have his first beer of
the day. Their maid Karen brought in
Thor's favorite cereal and he sat down to eat with his folks. Following the meal, he went directly to his
tree house where he decided he would wait until his grandfather's body was
discovered. He couldn't read, of course,
he was too keyed-up about the forthcoming developments and anxious that he may
have done something wrong.
Just before noon the intercom in the tree
house squealed to life and he heard his mother's voice.
"Hey, lunch is ready, why don't you
come on in?"
Thor pressed the send button. "OK,
mom, I'll be there in a couple of minutes."
Now he was really knotted-up because
nothing seemed to be happening. A sudden
horrible fear seized him. What if he
came in to eat and found his grandfather sitting at the table? By the time he reached the back door, he had
almost convinced himself that was going to happen, and he was nearly petrified. To his utter relief, only his mother was
sitting at the dining room table when he entered.
"Hey, sweetie, will you go up and
let your grandpa know some food is ready?
He's usually up by now."
"Aw, mom, do I have to? He's always kind of grumpy when he first gets
up."
"Please, baby. My knee has been hurting me lately and I
don't want to go up those stairs if I don't have to. It'll only take a minute, just run on up real
quick."
Thor didn't want to protest too much,
that might look suspicious. He decided
it was time for an acting job. "OK,
mom, I'll be back in a minute." He
trudged upstairs on the stairway in the foyer, then reluctantly approached
Michael's room. Another wave of
near-terror engulfed him as he opened the door and timidly approached the
bed. The old man lay just as he had left
him and Thor could tell he was dead just from looking at his pale, ashen
face. He took a few deep breaths,
steeled himself, then bolted back into the hallway down the stairs and into the
dining room.
"Mom, mom! Something's wrong, grandpa wouldn't wake
up! I'm scared." Thor burst into tears, something he had
mastered some time before, but which he rarely used.
His mother was in an instant panic and
bolted to the second story. Thor
retreated to the living room and huddled on a couch, rocking gently. Within just a few minutes, he heard a siren
outside and there was a hubbub of activity and voices when the front door was
opened. Karen came in, sat beside him
and hugged him.
"What's wrong?" Thor asked
meekly.
"Ah, honey, they're taking your
grandpa to the hospital."
"Is he OK?"
"I don't know they didn't tell me,
let's wait for your mom, I'll stay with you."
A short while later, Barbara entered the
room, motioning for Thor to come to her, tears streaming from her eyes. Thor ran to her and fell into her embrace as
she began to sob.
"Baby, grandpa is gone--he died in
his sleep."
Thor hugged her more tightly. "I'm sorry, mommy. I love you."
Thor had a few more anxious days until
the results were released from a routine autopsy which he heard his parents
talking about. His grandfather's death
had been ruled accidental, caused by a combination of his sleep apnea as well
as a high level of alcohol and a significant amount of Ambien. There was no mention of foul play at all,
much to Thor's relief.
By the time a memorial service was held
at the mortuary the day of his grandfather's burial, Thor was feeling
great. There was an open casket and his
mother asked him if he wanted to say good-bye to Michael or if it would bother
him too much. Thor was actually anxious to take one last look at what he had
done, and Barbara was slightly troubled by the length of time Thor spent in
front of the casket.
Thor gazed down on the face of his
long-time abuser and felt a thrill of empowerment. You'll
never hurt me again, he thought, and
no one will ever know what I did. He
couldn't remember the last time he felt so happy.
Chapter 4
Evil, once embraced, becomes intoxicating to those who are concerned only with their own desires.
The golden retriever, only months old,
loped clumsily through the back gardens, eagerly exploring the inviting wonders
of this strange new world. Every few
steps he stopped, lowered his nose and sniffed at some unseen attraction in the
grass or flowers. Thor watched him
closely, struggling to contain his rising excitement. He left the puppy to explore and went to the
garage to gather some equipment. He
returned to the back yard a few minutes later with a tool box, opened it, then
began to arrange some items on a grassy area.
The dog was still busily exploring its new domain.
"'C'mere, boy come on!" Thor
called, slapping his thigh. The young
animal's ears perked up and he charged over to Thor, tail wagging.
"That's it, you trust me already,
don't you?" The puppy cocked his
head, tongue lolling out one side of its mouth.
As the retriever watched with curiosity, Thor took four large tents pegs
and drove them firmly into the lawn in a rectangular pattern. He then tied a length of nylon rope to each
of the pegs. By the time he was done,
the puppy had wandered off again, but it took only a short whistle to bring him
running.
Thor reached down, grasped a thin
foreleg, and flipped the puppy roughly on its back in the middle of the pegs,
his action provoking a yelp of pain and surprise. Holding the animal in place with a knee to
the chest, Thor firmly lashed one of the ropes to the leg he was gripping. Then, seizing a back leg, he tied a second
cord to it, curled the loose end around the peg diagonal to the one where the
first leg was lashed and cinched it tight--very tight.
The golden retriever cried out and began
to struggle violently. It was too
late. Within moments, Thor had bound the
two remaining legs and the dog was nearly immobilized. Thor stood back and surveyed his handiwork
for a few seconds. It reminded him of
the manner in which he had bound his grandfather to his own bed a couple of
years earlier. "All right,
boy," he announced, "it's time to see what you're made of--and what
I'm made of."
Reaching into the tool box, he extracted
a heavy-duty staple gun. He examined it
momentarily, knelt beside the puppy, pressed the instrument firmly against the
animal's flank, then had to use both hands to squeeze the trigger, firing a
staple into the tender flesh. The beast
stiffened, then howled sharply as the pain registered. Thor studied the reaction, then placed a
second staple in the puppy's rib cage. The
pitiful creature writhed in agony and redoubled his howling, which now eerily
resembled a hoarse human scream.
"Oh, yes, that hurts, doesn't
it?" Thor commented. "Don't be
such a cry-baby, we're only getting started.
Thor shot the next staple into the puppy's testicles, causing him to gag
and choke as his body shook with spasms of agony. The boy was pleased with himself. This was turning out to be far easier and
more pleasurable than he had fantasized.
He felt not the slightest twinge of pity for the creature he was
torturing. Having the puppy's fate
completely in his hands gave him a similar sense of the power and control he
had felt after taking his grandfather's life--without any of the fears and
anxiety he had then experienced.
It wasn't just power, but the ultimate
power--that over life and death itself.
He leaned over and planted a final staple in the dog's left eye, who
thrashed his head wildly and literally screamed. The noise was becoming tiresome and Thor
punched the dog heavily in the stomach, leaving him gasping and moaning. The boy next produced a large pair of pliers
from the toolbox. Slowly, relentlessly,
he twisted and jerked each nail loose from the puppy's paws. By the time he was done, each limb was
bleeding profusely while the beast could manage no more than ragged whimpers.
"Uh-oh," Thor commented, noting
the crimson pools forming in the grass.
"I can't have you bleeding to death." He took a mini-butane torch from the toolbox,
lit it and adjusted the flame to a pinpoint of blue. As he applied it to the first paw, the fur
flared briefly and the flesh sizzled immediately. The dog vomited and released its bowels. When Thor finished cauterizing the last foot,
the golden retriever had lapsed into merciful unconsciousness. The boy went into the house and fixed a
sandwich, without any concerns. His
parents would be gone until the evening and the staff had the day off. Though he was only seven, his parents had
developed a deep trust in his ability to care for himself on the well-secured
estate.
When he returned, the miserable animal
was awake again, trembling violently.
Thor was mildly surprised at the amount of punishment the animal was
able to absorb. Now refreshed, he
resumed his torture with a renewed vigor.
With the same pair of pliers, he proceeded to snap the delicate bones in
each of the puppy's legs, the crunch as they gave way was somehow thrilling to
the boy. Though the dog attempted to cry
out, only a thin hiss of air marked his protest of the treatment.
Thor stood and leisurely stretched. He had grown bored, especially since he was
now getting so little reaction from his victim.
"Time to die, boy," he said calmly. Kneeling over the puppy, he grasped him by
the throat and watched intently as he choked the last sparks of life from the
young body.
He carefully cleaned all of the gear,
throwing out the cords which were stained with blood. After placing the dog's corpse in a garbage
bag, then placing it within a second and then third one, he put it in the large
dumpster by the house, making sure it was covered by other garbage. He then returned to the back and washed down
the lawn until there wasn't the slightest sign of blood. As he rolled up the hose, he was somewhat
disappointed. He didn't experience nearly
the satisfaction he had felt after killing his grandfather.
The sun had dipped below the horizon and
brilliant bands of red and gold streaked the desert sky. Barbara Eriksson was unable to appreciate the
beauty of the scene. From the air-conditioned
comfort of the living room, she noted the reading from the temperature gauge in
the pool area still topped 100 degrees and she silently cursed the Arizona
heat. Lars and Thor seemed to thrive in
torrid weather, but she had learned to dread the approach of May.
Shaking her head in disgust, Barbara
turned away from the patio door and went upstairs to check on Thor. She was pleasantly surprised to find him
already reclined in his oversized bed.
"It looks like someone's tired
tonight."
Thor grinned impishly, a sight that made
him irresistibly cute. "I played
outside all afternoon," he replied.
"My eyes are really dry and tired from the sun."
"That'll do it," she
agreed. "How about if I tuck you
in?" She carefully adjusted the
sheet around him, sat on the bed and kissed him gently on the forehead.
"Oh, Thor, I forgot to ask you, but
Mrs. Lady called earlier--you know them, they live in the big place down the
road. Their golden retriever somehow got
out of their back yard this morning. You
didn't see any sign of him wandering around the fence in the back, did
you?"
"No, mom. I hope he's not lost. That's a nice puppy."
"Yes, he is. Anyway, you get some sleep. I'm sure they'll find him soon. Goodnight, honey."
"'Night, Mom."
She paused to admire her blond seven-year
old, and, tired as he was, he quickly took advantage of her delayed departure.
"Mom?"
"Yes, dear?"
"Does God exist?"
Barbara knitted her brows in puzzlement,
because the question surprised her.
"Who's been talking about that?" she asked, trying to appear
nonchalant. Thor instantly read her
interest and struggled free of the covers she had so carefully arranged around
him.
"Well, Jimmy Garcia keeps saying
that God made everything in the universe and that he can do anything. He also said that if you do bad things and
don't pray to God, you'll go to Hell. Is
any of that true, huh?"
Barbara sighed. "Haven't we already talked about this,
Thor?"
"Yeah, sort of," he admitted.
"Honey, have I ever lied to
you?"
"'Course not."
She sat beside her son once again,
reached out and gently stroked his hair.
"Then listen carefully, because it's important for you to
understand this. God is just like Santa
Claus. Some people believe in him, but
he's not real."
"Yeah, but even a lot of grownups
believe in God, they talk about him all the time."
"You're absolutely right. And a thousand years ago, most adults
believed in dragons and thought the world was flat. Just because a lot of people believe in
something doesn't make it true. People
who believe in God are mostly afraid to be in charge of their own lives, and we
don't want you to be like that, son. God
is just another fairy tale, and you're too smart to believe in such
stories."
"So Hell isn't real, either?"
"Of course not. They just use that to try and scare other
people into believing in God like they do."
Thor pondered the implications. "Then what happens to us when we
die?"
"Every living thing dies, honey, and
it's nothing to be afraid of. When we
die, it's just the same as before we were born--We're just not here
anymore. That means life is very, very
precious, and we need to make it the best life we can. That's what we want for you."
"So I should try and have as much
fun as I can?"
Barbara giggled. "Sort of. But as you get older you'll find that your
idea of what is fun will change a lot.
That's part of growing up."
"Some people think it's fun to hurt
others," Thor said solemnly.
"Like Hitler. He thought it
was fun to kill the Jews, didn't he? I
read that some of his doctors used to do experiments on them just to see how
much pain they could take."
This unexpected turn in the conversation
alarmed Barbara, though she muted her reaction.
"Oh, but they were wrong, so wrong.
Hitler was a sick and very evil man, Thor. Everybody has the right to a happy life, and
men like Hitler take that away from them without any reason."
"What if the people are already
unhappy? The women that Jack The Ripper
killed lived terrible lives in a dirty place."
Barbara's alarm turned to horror and she
couldn't mask it. "Where in the
world did you learn about Jack the Ripper? she demanded, a hard edge in her
voice.
"Just a book. It wasn't that bad. It was even kind of funny because he kept
tricking the police and..."
"Thor, I never want you to read
books like that again, at least not until you're much older. Do you understand me?" The iron tone in her voice caught him
off-guard.
"I'm sorry, Mom, I won't," he
lied, putting on his meekest face.
"I'm glad, because I want you to see
the good in people, not how terrible a few of them can be. Can you understand that?"
"You and dad are really good. I want to be just like you."
That put her much more at ease and she
kissed her son again before leaving.
Thor didn't fall asleep for a long
while. He realized he didn't really
understand his parents and he was sure they didn't understand him. Although they realized he possessed
exceptional intelligence, they had no concept of how advanced he was. His greatest feat had become hiding his
intellect from others. Occasionally, he
couldn't resist showing off a bit, but that always seemed to lead to
problems. All talk of advancing him in
school had died and Dr. Samuels himself was convinced that Thor had merely had
an extraordinary early jump in development which then sharply leveled off.
He should have known better than to bring
up anything about Hitler or Jack the Ripper.
His mother became paranoid when he showed any interest in such subjects,
especially since the long-ago incident with the bees. For the most part, he presented himself to
her just as she wanted to see him. He
had become very good at reading her reactions and his enthusiasm tonight had
muddled his judgment. He would be more
careful in the future.
"There is not, my mom told me
so," Thor said smugly.
Jimmy Garcia considered this for a
moment. "Then your mom told you a
lie."
Thor's temper flared. "You better take that back. My mother doesn't tell lies. She says believing in God is just like
believing in Santa Claus. I'll bet you
still believe in Santa Claus, don't you?
He's not real, you know."
"You're a big, fat liar," Jimmy
yelled. "I don't believe you."
"Too bad. That just means you're stupid. Only stupid people believe in things that
aren't real."
That did it. Jimmy threw himself at his tormentor, but
Thor avoided him easily, throwing the boy to the ground where he began to thump
him soundly.
"Fight, fight!" the cry went
up, and everyone came running, but it didn't last long. The on-duty teacher was observant, and only
moments later, he pushed his way through the kids and hauled the two boys to
their feet by their collars.
"All right, what's the problem
here?"
"He started it," Thor
said. "All I did was argue with
him, then he tried to tackle me."
"It's Thor's fault," Jimmy
countered. He says there's no God or
Santa Claus. He called me stupid, so I
got mad."
"March yourselves to the principal's
office right now, you can discuss this with Mr. Simms."
Thor assumed a truculent look for a
moment, then thought better of it. As
they trudged toward the office, Thor could sense the teacher's eyes following
them. Without turning his head, he said,
"Jimmy, you're such a baby. If he
hadn't stopped it, I would have beaten you up."
"I'm not scared of you."
"Oh, yeah. Well fuck you!" Thor had switched to his power vocabulary,
something other seven-year olds still feared using. Jimmy drew in his breath sharply.
"You're in trouble now. I'm going to tell Mr. Simms."
"Then you're a son-of-a-bitch
squealer, too."
Jimmy didn't argue with that. Nobody wanted to be known as a squealer.
When they walked into the reception area
in front of the principal's office, Mrs. Wheeler, a dour secretary looked up
from her magazine with displeasure.
Thor took the bold approach. "Mrs. Wheeler, we were sent to see Mr.
Simms. We were fighting on the
playground."
She stared them down for long moments and
though Jimmy averted his eyes, Thor met her gaze without flinching, causing her
habitual frown to deepen. Very deliberately,
she pressed a button on the intercom console on her desk.
"Yes?"
"Mr. Simms, there are two young men
out here who have been sent to see you.
They evidently have been fighting on school grounds."
"Send them in."
Thor glanced at Jimmy and saw that the
boy was terrified. Thor felt strangely
excited at the prospect of confronting the highest authority in the
school. Though the boys would not have
realized it, Mr. Simpson had set up his office in imitation of what he thought
was the power position of a corporate executive. He sat behind a large oak desk, and the only
light in the office streamed in from half-drawn blinds, obscuring any visitor's
vision and hiding his face in shadow.
The boys stopped before his desk and
waited for the principal to speak. He
remained silent, allowing tension to build, or so he thought.
Thor broke the silence. "We're here because we were
fighting. I told Jimmy that there is no
Santa Claus and no God, so he got mad and started the fight. I was starting to beat him up when the
teacher stopped us."
It peeved Mr. Simms that Thor had seized
the initiative in the conversation and he was also disturbed by the report,
being a devout Mormon. "What do you
have to say, Jimmy?"
The frightened boy could scarcely speak,
his voice quavering. "It, it was
like he said Mr. Simms. I got mad and
started to fight. He shouldn't have said
those things."
"You may be right, Jimmy, but that's
no reason to start a fight. I'll have to
call your parents."
"Yes, sir. I'm sorry." He was near tears.
"I know you are. But you, Thor, are another matter. You don't seem sorry at all."
"I'm not," Thor replied
steadily. " I didn't do anything wrong."
Thor's defiance disconcerted the principal--It
had a maturity to it that Mr. Simms had never before seen in a child this age.
"You were fighting, you don't call
that wrong?"
"I was just defending myself."
"Perhaps, but you made him angry by
what you said."
"I have a right to my opinions, and
so does Jimmy. Even if we disagree,
that's no reason to start a fight."
The principal was perplexed by Thor's
sophisticated use of language and reasoning.
"What grade are you in?"
"Second."
"You speak like someone who is much
older. You're in Mrs. Matthews gifted
class, aren't you? Do you think that
makes you smarter than other people?"
Thor shrugged. "I don't know, maybe--I always get good
grades in everything."
"So if you're more advanced than
your classmates, why did you find it necessary to torment Jimmy?"
"He started it by talking about
God. All I did was tell him I don't
believe in him. That's what my mom told
me, and she would never lie."
"I'm sure she wouldn't. However, you realize that most people in this
country do believe in God. I believe in
God. You should respect that."
Thor shrugged again. "I don't care if other people believe in
God, but I have the right to express my own opinion, don't I?"
"Of course you do. But since you seem to be ahead of the other
children in many ways, maybe you should try to be sensitive to the way they see
things. I'm sure you want people to like
you, don't you?"
"Sure, Mr. Simms."
"Then sometimes we need to be
careful about the things we say, especially if we know it will upset others and
even if we don't think the same way. Do
you think you can do that? It's all part
of growing up and getting along with people."
"I'll do my best." he replied,
all the while thinking to himself, he's
not even going to punish me!
"Good. Now I'm still going to have to let your
parents know about this, Thor, but I think you understand things better now--I
don't see any reason for either of you to be in here again, do you?"
"No, sir," they answered in
unison.
"So shake hands and go back to your
classes."
As they left and walked back in silence,
Thor's mind was working furiously. It
was suddenly hitting him how different he was not only from the other children,
but from most adults as well. Almost all
of them believed the fairy tales about God.
He was one of the few who knew the truth. It wasn't popular, though--in fact, it was very
upsetting to other people to even hear such views. Therefore, the best thing for him to do was
to keep his beliefs to himself. Besides,
it gave him a sense of pride to realize he knew truths that even most adults
didn't understand.
Another thought struck home with force,
something he had realized for a long time, but which was now more evident than
ever. It was only people like Mr. Simms
who could punish him for behaving improperly.
If he wanted to, he could do anything he wanted as long as he didn't get
caught. Anything. Exciting
possibilities began rushing through his mind.
When he got home, he faced the inevitable
lecture from his parents. He showed proper contrition but still had his
television privileges removed for a week.
He laughed about that, because he rarely watched it, and they were all
over the house and in the tree house as well.
He could have watched it three times as much as normal and his parents
never would have known. They were so
oblivious.
Jimmy Garcia loved the walk home. After school, he invariably followed the same
route. He walked north from the school,
then made his way across a mile of vacant field to his neighborhood. A deep gully cut through the middle of the
open grounds and he would often stop there to play. He had dug a fort in one of the earthen
banks, a small cave he had reinforced with scraps of lumber. He hadn't shown to even his best friends; it
was his little secret.
This was a late fall Arizona day like
most others--flawless. He whistled
happily as he left school. Although he
enjoyed classes, his mood improved even more when the school day came to an
end. He stopped at the second house from
the end of the street to reach through a fence and pet a cocker spaniel who
knew his routine and always seemed to be waiting for his attentions. Then he crossed the street and out into the
field.
After a leisurely stroll of just a few
minutes, he reached the wash and slid down the embankment near his private
retreat. As he neared, ne noticed
someone had been around. Four large
stakes had been driven into the bottom of the wash, each with pieces of rope
attached. The boy wondered who had put
them there. Maybe they were survey
markers of some sort and something would be built here, ruining his fort. He was worried they may have already
discovered his hideaway and he rushed over to look inside. As he squatted and bent down to enter,
someone came out. Jimmy let out a yell
of surprise and fear as he fell back.
"Hello, Jimmy," Thor said with
a grin. "Nice little cave you have
here."
Jimmy's terror increased and he shrank
back further against the opposite bank, staring at his former tormentor. "Wha, what are you doing here,
Thor?"
"Waiting for you."
The boy's throat had gone dry. "What do you want?"
"I brought a present for you,"
Thor said pleasantly. And sure enough,
in his hand was a gift-wrapped box.
Jimmy relaxed just a bit. "A present for me?"
"Yes, it's a surprise. I wanted to make up with you for our fight
last year."
"Oh, that's nice of you. I was really scared there for a minute."
"There's no need for that. Here, open it up, it's really
cool." Thor approached, holding the
present out with his left hand, his right arm casually tucked behind his back. As Jimmy reached out to take the present,
Thor's right arms swung in a rapid arc and Jimmy had no chance to duck the
small trophy bat that slammed into his temple.
His head throbbed, and he was sick. He struggled to open his eyes, but was so
dizzy he couldn't focus on anything.
After he blinked rapidly and shook his head, images began to
steady. He was tied down to the four
stakes he had noticed when he first came into the gully. His mouth was taped securely, and he couldn't
speak. Thor stood directly over him,
smiling cruelly.
"Good, I was afraid you weren't
going to wake up there for a minute. I
can't take long doing this, but I did want you to know what was happening. I'm going to kill you, Jimmy, partly because
of what happened last spring, but mostly because I just want to see how it
feels. Believe me, this is going to hurt
you a lot more than it's going to hurt me."
Jimmy was crying, his muted wails
plaintively released through his nostrils.
Thor laughed. "that sounds
funny, Jimmy. I've never heard anyone
cry through their nose before. You
should at least have waited until I gave you something to cry about."
Thor swung the bat, slamming it into
Jimmy's right shin. The child tried to
scream. Thor began raining vicious blows
down on all the clothed areas of his victim, inflicting horrible
punishment. After just a short time,
Jimmy went into shock and ceased reacting.
Thor straddled him and choked the remaining life from the boy, his eyes
never leaving his victim's face. When he
was finished, he stood over Jimmy, breathing heavily from his exertions. His exhilaration far surpassed that which
resulted from his efforts on the puppy.
It was even better than killing his
grandfather, because he felt none of the fear that had plagued him at that time--he
was in total control. It was the most
thrilling thing he had ever done. He
chuckled as he imagined the reactions of the first person to come upon the
scene.
Working carefully but quickly, he removed
all evidence from the scene. Thor untied the body from the stakes, and pulled
the stakes from the ground. He retrieved
a bag he had hidden in the fort, put on a pair of cloth gloves, then sprayed
and wiped each peg, the hammer, and the present thoroughly with a small bottle
of cleanser and cloth in the bag. He
smoothed the ground around the body and in the fort, then followed the gully up
into the hills above the field, checking a few times to see if anyone was in
view in the fields above--all clear. He
crossed several rocky outcrops where no footprints could be left which he had
mapped out earlier. In the scrub brush
between two rises, he found the hole he had previously dug. He dumped the bag there, covered it over,
then rolled a large rock on top. Using a
small mirror, he carefully checked himself over, finding no trace of
blood. Thor had taken care to strike the
boy only where he had clothing to prevent any blood spatter, and the first blow
to the head had been to Jimmy's temple, where he had a thick growth of black
hair down to his shoulders. If he had
broken the skin anywhere and caused bleeding, none of it had transferred onto
him.
Now he began to experience some
anxiety. He wasn't sure exactly how much
time he had taken and it was important to get home as quickly as possible. He raced down a ravine leading north, over another
rise, then cut east to the street where he had left his bike. It was a private road which serviced the
residences of a privileged few and which passed very close by the Eriksson
estate. It was the only reason his
parents allowed him to bike the five miles to school.
His bike was hidden behind the desert
shrubs where he had left it and he mounted quickly, then began the ride home
with the greatest speed possible. One
large luxury car did approach from the north during his trip home and he slowed
and waved casually as it passed before picking up his pace once again. When he was near his residence, he left the
road on a desert trail which led to the back of the property, let himself
through an electronic gate which had been placed there for his convenience,
then released the bike on the run onto a grassy area as he bolted for the tree
house.
His cell phone buzzed just as he closed
the door behind him and he took deep breaths before answering to calm himself.
"Hi, Mom," he said casually.
"Where are you, baby?"
"Up in the tree house."
"What, you don't even have time to
come in and say hello to your mother when you get home?" she teased.
"Sorry, I have some homework I
wanted to get done right away so I got distracted."
She sighed. "OK, come on in for a snack when you
want and maybe you can spare a few moments to say hi to your mother..."
"Aw, mom, I really am sorry, I love
you. I'll come in pretty soon."
Before he went into the house, Thor took
a quick shower, changed clothes and then spent a few minutes cutting up the
tennis shoes he had been wearing into small pieces, then flushing them
away. He had bought them a couple of
weeks earlier, and they were two sizes larger than he actually wore. That was just in case the police found traces
of his shoe markings in the area, which they probably would. As he watched the last of them swirl away, he
began to wonder what community reaction would be like.
Monica Garcia was irritated. It was almost dark and Jimmy had not yet
returned home and dinner was ready. The
boy often lost track of the time when playing with friends, and it was one of
her pet peeves. She made a couple of
quick calls to the parents of some of his best friends, but no one had seen
him. When another hour passed and he
still wasn't home, a deep unease replaced her aggravation. She made still more calls with no more
success than her earlier ones. When her
husband Armando arrived, she was in a near panic and they went into a full
scale search for their son. When that
came up empty, they called the police.
"You want me to go up with you,
Sarge?" detective Bill Valdez asked?
Sergeant Dean Harbinson shook his
head. "No, I'll take care of
it. Jesus, I hate this part of the
job." He opened his door and slowly
walked to the front door of the small suburban home. A bicycle had been carelessly thrown down in
the front yard. He noted it was about
the right size for an eight-year old boy.
He rang the doorbell and stared at the bike, thinking of his own son.
The door opened immediately and he was
greeted by a woman whose face would have been very pretty had it not been so
masked by worry.
"Hello, Mrs. Garcia? I'm detective Harbinson with the Scottsdale
Police Department. Is your husband home
with you?"
"No, he's still out looking with
everyone else, I stayed home just in case my son shows up. Have you found Jimmy?" She appeared to almost choke on her anxiety,
and Dean's heart dropped.
"Yes and I'm afraid I have terrible
news for you. There's no easy way to
tell you this, Mrs. Garcia," he said as gently as possible, "but we
found Jimmy's body in a field not far from here."
Monica collapsed in hysterical wailing
and Sergeant Harbinson went about the awkward task of trying to comfort a
stranger whose life had just been shattered.
Of course the story was front page news
the following morning, under a headline that read, "Scottsdale Boy
Brutally Slain." A thrill coursed
through the young murderer as he saw the paper in his father's hands and read
those words. He showed no interest,
however, until his father brought it up.
"This is terrible," Lars
said. "Thor, wasn't Jimmy Garcia a
classmate of yours?"
"He still is, we're in the same
class with the same teacher."
"I'm afraid he's dead, son. He was murdered yesterday not far from his
house in a vacant field."
Thor feigned shock. "I can't believe it, he was sitting near
me just yesterday afternoon."
"I'm sorry son. It says that he was killed on his way home,
and of course with a nut like that on the loose, every child is at risk. That means we're dropping you off and picking
you up at school. No more bike riding."
"Aw, dad, I'll be careful."
"Absolutely not, this is
settled. We're not taking any risks with
you, son."
In spite of his careful planning, this
was a consequence he hadn't even considered.
He suddenly began to worry about what else he might have
overlooked. Maybe I shouldn't have killed the little bastard.
Although an autopsy determined the cause
of death, the police were unable to determine what type of instrument had been
used to beat Jimmy. There were no
fingerprints, no fragments of cloth nor any other forensic evidence at the crime
scene. Other footprints were found in
the area, but they appeared to be those of another child. The person who had strangled Jimmy was
assumed to be an adult, it had required a good deal of strength to apply the
kind of pressure to his throat that had killed him.
Scottsdale Police devoted an enormous
amount of manpower to the case. Within a
week of Jimmy's death, every child in his class was being separately
interviewed, including Thor. When he was
asked to go down to the teacher's lounge, he knew what was coming because other
kids who had gone through the procedure had spread the word. He wasn't worried because he realized it was
routine--they were simply trying to gather information from anyone who might
have seen Jimmy that day. Thor entered
the room and a formidable-looking man nodded at him and motioned for him to
take a seat. A woman and a uniformed
police officer were present as well.
"Hello, Thor," the
large man began. "I'm Detective
Turow. I'm part of the team that is
trying to track down the person or persons responsible for the death of your
classmate, Jimmy Garcia. Now don't worry
about all of this, we're just here to ask a few questions and we hope that
somebody might remember something that will help us out--OK?"
Thor nodded, flashing a friendly smile.
"Good. First off, did you know Jimmy very
well?"
"About the same as everyone else, I
guess. We didn't hang out together or
anything. We even got in a little fight
last year and we got in trouble because of it." Thor figured he should offer that information,
it was probably something they had already found out and he wanted to defuse it
as an issue.
"Ah, your principal mentioned
that. He said you are a very intelligent
young man as well."
Thor shrugged. "I guess so."
"What was it you and Jimmy were
fighting about?"
"Mmmm, it was something about Santa
Claus and God, I think, and he didn't like it and tried to grab me."
"Jimmy's sister says he was afraid
of you after that."
A seed of doubt began to grow in Thor's
mind. Do they suspect me? "I
never noticed that, because we stayed away from each other after the
fight."
"Do you remember where you were
after school the day Jimmy was killed?
Did you happen to see him on his way home walking with anyone?"
"I didn't see him that day. I rode my bike home like I used to do every
day, then did some homework in my tree house until my mom called me to come
in. My parents won't let me do that
anymore, they say it isn't safe."
"They're right about that. Just a couple of more questions, Thor. I see you're wearing tennis shoes today. They aren't Keds by any chance, are they?
"No, they're Adidas."
"Do you own any Keds sneakers?"
"No, I only wear Adidas and
Nike. My mom buys all my shoes for me
and those are the kinds I like."
"Do you know your shoe size by chance?"
"I think it's size 7, but I'm not
sure. I keep growing."
"Could we take a quick look, if you
don't mind?"
"Sure," the boy replied,
untying one and pulling it loose.
The detective glanced inside--size 7,
then handed it back.
"One last question. Can you think of anybody that would have
wanted to hurt Jimmy Garcia for any reason at all?"
Thor shook his head vigorously. "Nobody.
I mean, even though we had our little fight, I knew he was a nice guy
and he had lots of friends. I can't
think of anybody in the world who would want to do something like this to
him."
"Thank you for your help, you can go
back to class now, Thor."
"You're welcome and I sure hope you
catch whoever did this real soon. I
don't want it to happen to anyone else."
"We'll do our best."
After Thor was gone, the three police
staffers looked at one another.
"What do you think?" Turow
asked, directing his question to the woman.
Criminal psychologist Brenda Philips
brushed back a strand of hair.
"Smart kid, but I didn't see anything unusual about him."
"Yeah, dammit. After we talked to his principal earlier in
the week, I thought there might be something there. We've come up with a big zero with all these
kids. Nobody saw nothin'." Turow would remain obsessed over the case for
the rest of his career, never obtaining any satisfaction. An eight-year old boy had outwitted
Scottsdale's finest.
Chapter 5
Love is the single greatest value in Human Life--it transcends even survival instincts.
He must
be crazy, John
thought. He's only eleven years old, and he's in love. William Paul Johnson was staring at the
golden-haired Marie Sanders in the next aisle where she was seated directly in
front of John. He liked the vantage
point because he could watch her without her being aware of his attentions. At the moment, she was deep in concentration
on the paper before her, pen flying nimbly over the page.
"Mr. Johnson, I assume you have
completed your assignment?"
Willie snapped to attention and glanced
sheepishly at his teacher, her penetrating gaze confirming his worst fears--she
knew where he had been staring, and why.
Shielded by Marie, John was jabbing a finger toward her while grinning
at Willie.
"Yes, yes, Sister Rose," he
stammered. The nun was one of the few
remaining members of her religious order who still taught at the Catholic grade
school which they had founded some decades earlier, and she was all business.
"Then I would like to see it, I'll
grade it right now." she replied, beckoning Willie forward with a tiny
motion of one gnarled finger. Willie
rose instantly to comply. Reaching her
desk, he carefully handed his paper to her, being certain to maintain a proper
attitude of courtesy, if not servility.
It paid no dividends to risk evoking Sister Rose's wrath. She would always win--God was on her side.
Willie stood stiffly to the side of her
desk, hands crossed in front of his crotch in an unconscious gesture of
self-protection. His stomach knotted as
she pulled a red pen out of her desk drawer.
Willie noted that every item inside was meticulously placed. God's universe was one of order, and sister
Rose emulated it perfectly. She began
going through his answers one by one, poising the tip of her pen by each number
in preparation for making a dreaded check mark.
Glancing up, he saw John craning his head around Marie, eyes and mouth
wide open in mock horror.
The nervous boy held his breath as the
pen moved from question to question.
When she passed the eighth one, he allowed himself to begin breathing
again. He should have known better than
to break the magic spell he had woven with the effort. On question nine, the red pen flashed and a
large red check appeared on the page, while sister Rose clucked her tongue in
concern. Even worse, she made the same
motion on the final question, and Willie felt the blood rushing to his
face. His only comfort came in the fact
that his black skin made it undetectable to the other children, all of whom
were watching the scene with interest.
She slowly looked up and Willie had to
avert his eyes, unable to bear her gaze.
"Willie, this isn't up to your usual
standards. Eight out of ten is only
80%. That's a "C" in my class,
as you know."
He had trouble finding his voice. "Yes, sister. I'm sorry."
"Perhaps you're allowing yourself to
be distracted," she commented, glancing over at Marie. "Maybe you need to be moved to a new
seat."
The ultimate humiliation. Sister Rose knew everything, just like
God. He had no reply and stared down at
his shoes. The nun let him agonize for a
few more moments.
"Well, maybe that won't be
necessary. But I do hope you'll put the
effort into your schoolwork that I know you're capable of doing. All I ask is that you do your
best." She held the paper out to
him. "You may return to your
seat. Make the corrections in the last
two answers before I collect all the papers."
"Yes, Sister Rose." As he walked back to his desk, he could tell
Marie was watching him, but he dared not meet her eyes. She had no idea how he felt and he could only
hope that she hadn't caught the subtleties of Sister Rose's remarks. He would have to be much more careful now
that he had confirmed that Sister Rose could all but read his mind. Life in St. Catherine's Grade School was not
easy, but even so, Willie loved it, especially since he was there with his best
friend. He suddenly dreaded recess, for
he knew John was going to tease him unmercifully and a quick glance revealed
the wicked grin which was the precursor to that activity. He would have to take his medicine, it would
be his turn to dish it out another time.
John Patrick McDonough awoke, fully
alert. He loved Saturdays and the
freedom they offered. He bounced from
his bed, ran to the living room and flicked on the television, tuning in "The
Real World" on MTV--one of his favorites.
He plopped down on the couch, where he intended to spend a couple of
hours before going outside to play.
A few minutes later, the twins wandered
in, rubbing their eyes.
"What's on?" Chris asked?
"The Real World," John informed
him.
"This show sucks," Curtis
objected. "We want to watch
cartoons."
"No way. I was up first and I'll watch what I
want. Besides, I'm older, so go watch
the TV in your room"
"Not fair!" Chris retorted,
immediately siding with his twin.
"We want to watch something else on the bigscreen. That's two against one."
"Well, this one is bigger than you
two," John said, patting his chest.
So be quiet because I'm trying to watch this and you're pissing me
off."
Curtis ignored him, walked up to the TV
and changed to another station.
John tried to use the remote control, but
Curtis blocked the signal.
"Change it back right now, I mean
it!"
"Two to one," was all Curtis
would say.
"Then have a knuckle-sandwich,"
John snapped, jumping to his feet and punching the smaller boy on the shoulder.
Curtis began to blubber instantly. "You're in for it now--I'm gonna tell
Mom!"
"Go ahead--she'll get mad at your
for waking her up so early, then you'll be in trouble."
Curtis considered that, deciding he
didn't want to risk it. Instead, knowing
better, he struck back at John with a kick to the leg.
"Ow, you little faggot, now you're
really in trouble."
Curtis was already bolting for the
kitchen and as John began to sprint after him, Chris stuck out a leg and
tripped him, sending him sprawling heavily to the rug.
The twins howled with laughter. "You're the faggot," Chris yelled,
not even knowing what it meant.
"You can't even run right."
John was now thoroughly enraged. He cut Chris off as he sprinted for a hallway
and landed several heavy blows to his shoulder, an action he instantly
regretted. In his anger, he had hit his
brother far harder than he had intended, and though he hadn't violated their
unwritten rule of never hitting to the face, he was far beyond the limits for one
of their normal spats. Chris fell to the
floor grasping his shoulder, and his tears were far more real than the whining
his twin had done moments before.
John got to his knees and awkwardly tried
to comfort his brother. "Hey, I'm
sorry. I didn't mean to hit you so
hard. You just got me so mad."
Chris wouldn't give him the comfort of a
response and continued holding his shoulder as he rocked back and forth and
wept. John felt horrible and as he
looked over at Curtis, his brother's eyes were full of recriminations.
"Come on, Chris, I said I'm
sorry," John urged. "If you'll
stop crying I'll let you watch what you want on TV."
A
door creaked open down the hall, John was hoping it was his sister Gwen, but
his mother came into view.
"What in the world is going on out
here? Why are you boys making so much
noise?"
"John hit us," Chris
sobbed. "We didn't do anything to
him."
Theresa looked to her oldest boy for
confirmation.
"They started it," John began
defensively. "I was watching TV
first and they tried to change the channel."
"So you hit them? All because of a stupid TV show?" Chris further weakened John indefensible
position by seeking refuge in his mother's arms. He realized it was time to back down.
"I'm sorry, I know it was
stupid. I just got mad and I didn't mean
to hurt them."
Theresa shook her head. "We have talked about this enough
lately. What is going on with you boys,
this seems to be happening more and more?
John, you're the oldest and I
expect more out of you. You're supposed
to be watching out for your brothers, not picking on them. Don't you realize how much they look up to
you, and then you treat them like this?
You have got to grow up and stop doing this, I'm sick of it. You can go to your room and think about this
the rest of the morning."
John started for his room without a word,
and as he did so, he glanced back at his brothers, both of whom were now
smirking openly. His anger flared and
then burned as Chris stuck out his tongue and Curtis, standing behind his mother,
placed a hand on his belly, pointed, and shook with a silent, mocking
laughter. John threw himself on his bed
and burst into tears of anger and frustration.
For the moment, he detested his brothers. All
right, if Mom doesn't want me to bother them, I'll just never speak to them
again and I'll never invite them to do anything with me. Let's see who's hurting then. I'm not dad, why should I have to take his
place?
Less than an hour later, the door
opened. John pretended to be asleep and
kept his back to the door, knowing it would be one or both of the twins coming
to make peace. Well, it would be
different this time. He was tired of
always being blamed for their little fights, and there weren't going to be anymore
because he wanted going to have anything to do with the little bastards again.
"John?" It was Curtis' voice, a tad higher than
Chris'.
John continued to ignore him.
"Hey, John," Chris chimed in,
"Mom says it's OK for you to come out now."
"I don't want to come out."
"We put MTV back on, there's another
episode of "Real World."
"So what?"
"So come watch it with us."
John rolled over and stared coldly at his
two young nemeses. "I don't want to
do anything with you two ever again."
His tone had just the desired effect.
The younger boys were genuinely distressed.
"We're sorry," Chris
tried. "We didn't mean to get you
in trouble."
"Yeah, well you're always sorry and
I'm always the one who gets in trouble.
So do me a favor and get out of my life.
I'm just going to pretend I don't have any brothers." John had worked himself into a bit of a
fury. Against his better judgment, he
hit them with words he had never voiced before.
"I hate both of you. I wish
you had never been born."
The reaction was immediate and far
stronger than he expected. The twins
burst into tears and John swallowed back a sudden lump in his throat. He was in uncharted territory and realized he
wanted out in the worst way, but didn't know what direction to take. His brothers turned to leave, their shoulders
shaking.
"Wait," John called, his voice
breaking as he was overwhelmed by emotion.
The twins turned and he ran to them, hugging them as he hadn't done
since they were toddlers.
"I'm sorry, guys, I didn't mean
it. You know I didn't mean it. You're my best friends, you always will be."
The boys clung to him and they were
crying together. John realized with
total clarity that something was changing.
He would never fight with them as he had that morning and Father Tim's
advice to love his family more than ever now made perfect sense. He glanced up to find his mother in the
doorway smiling, but with tears glistening on her cheeks. It made him weep all the harder and she
approached and embraced all three of her sons.
Her family had moved into the
neighborhood during July, and John McDonough and his family were among the
first to greet them. He was so different
than any boy she had ever known. He was
always in a good mood, and though he occasionally teased others, it was always
in good fun, never vicious. She loved to
watch him with his friends when he was unaware she was observing. John was the natural leader of any group he
was with, but did it without employing any of the bullying techniques so common
in other boys his age.
Yet she was also frustrated. He would be going to a Catholic school for
eighth grade, while she was in a public school.
There was a mystique about it she couldn't understand, and when she
questioned her parents, they launched into a tirade about how, even though John
and his family were very nice, they belonged to a church that was evil and had
once controlled the world and tortured and killed a lot of people. The stories were horrifying, but they
certainly didn't seem to have anything to do with the cute brunette boy across
the street. Laurene Wilson was
determined to get to know him better.
Her first real opportunity came a few
weeks later during the early fall. John
had received a new football for his birthday and he was out on his lawn alone
kicking it around. Normally, Willie or
the twins would be out there with him, so she decided to act quickly. She already had workout clothes on, so she
slipped on a pair of tennis shoes and shrugging off her nervousness, moved
directly across the street.
"Could I play catch with you,
John?" she asked boldly.
He stared at her, momentarily
puzzled. "I throw pretty
hard," he replied.
"Give it a try, I'll be all
right."
He nodded and positioned his fingers on
the threads of the football, patted it several times, then lofted a soft spiral
toward the girl. Unlike even most boys
that age, she reached out and snatched the ball with her hands, rather than
catching and cradling it against her body.
"Nice catch," John said,
genuinely impressed.
Laurene smiled and casually fired a pass
back, nearly catching him off guard. It
was with some difficulty that he managed to handle the pass. His eyebrows raised in surprise at the
strength of her arm.
"Nice catch," she mimicked.
"Making fun of me?"
"Not at all. It's just that boys always assume girls can't
do things like this very well."
They tossed the ball back and forth a few
more times. "Where did you learn to
play?" John asked.
"My dad. He played in college, and when all he and Mom
had were two girls, he played football with us."
They played for a while longer, then sat
on the lawn. John began fidgeting
nervously with the ball, while Laurene stole glances at him.
"What's your school like? she asked.
"It's pretty good. They're strict, but I feel like I'm learning
a lot. I have a lot of friends there, especially
Willie--you've met him before. How about
your school?"
"I like it, but I've always wondered
about Catholic schools. Don't you have
to wear uniforms?"
"Yeah, but after a while I don't
even think about it. When I see other
kids who aren't wearing them, then I know they're in public school."
Laurene hesitated, then decided to speak
her mind. "I'm afraid my parents
don't like the Catholic Church very much."
John felt defensive, but forced himself
to relax and smile. "That's all
right. My grandpa used to feel the same
about Protestant churches.
"Oh, yeah? What did he say?"
"All kinds of things. Like that the Church was all one until Martin
Luther broke away and started his own religion and that after that all kinds of
people did the same and there were wars and everybody started hating everybody
else. I don't really understand much of
it, it's like ancient history. What
about your folks, what do they say about Catholics?"
"The same kinds of things, except
the Catholic Church tried to force everyone to stay Catholic, especially
something called the Spanish Inqui..., oh, I can't say it right."
"The Spanish Inquisition," John
supplied. "I've read about that and
talked to Father Tim about it. It really
was a terrible thing, but it was a long time ago."
"I guess, but my parents act like it
might happen again or something. Then
they talk about things like praying to the Saints and Mary, stuff like
that."
"It is different," John
admitted. "I guess it all just
depends on the way you're raised."
Something else was on Laurene's mind, and
she hesitated before overcoming her reluctance and voicing it. "You do have friends that are
protestants, don't you?"
"Of course," he responded
quickly. There are even lots that go to
my school. Most of my realtives on my
mom's side are not Catholic, she became one when she married my dad."
That was encouraging and Laurene pushed
forward. "Do you ever like to go to
movies?"
John suddenly realized where the
conversation was headed and flushed a bright red. "Yeah, sometimes."
Laurene moved in to seal the deal. "Well, maybe we could go together
sometime, like a twilight show when it's a lot cheaper."
In spite of his awkwardness, John
realized that Laurene's interest was enthralling--she was certainly one of the
prettiest girls he had ever known, with long, dark hair which streamed to the
middle of her back, deep blue eyes, and perfect, full lips which seemed as
though they were designed to be kissed along with curves that maybe shouldn't
have been so prominent on a girl in eighth grade.
"That might be all right--as long as
it's PG. My mom won't let me see any R
movies, though some of my friends sneak in."
"Me neither," she quickly
agreed. "I'll keep a watch out for
something good."
"Great. I'd better be going, I told the twins I would
take them down to the park this morning."
"I'll see you later. Bye, John."
The way his name flowed from her lips
made his heart skip several beats. He
waved as he entered his house. His mom
was standing there with a knowing smile on her lips, and he blushed again, but
didn't make a comment, nor did she press him.
"So what about it?"
"I don't even know if she likes
me. She just talks to me sometimes. I'm not going to ask her to go to the
movies." Willie said.
"Then I'll do it for you," John
suggested.
"No way!" Willie protested.
"What, are you afraid of her?"
John needled.
"No, it just doesn't seem like a
good idea, that's all."
"Why not? I know she likes you. Every time you get up to go sharpen a pencil
or anything she's watching you."
"Maybe her parents wouldn't like
it."
"What do you mean?"
"I mean because I'm black, that's
what."
"So?"
"So, are you stupid or what? Haven't you ever heard of racial
prejudice?"
"Yeah, but that's more like down in
the South during slave times and the Civil Rights marches."
Willie shook his head. "I guess that's why you're my best
friend, John--you're totally blind to things like that. But my parents grew up with it in Alabama and
it still happens everywhere. Just look
at this place. There are hardly any
black people in Scottsdale, and every time I go in a store, I get watched and
even followed because of my skin. You
don't know what it's like having strangers stare at you just because of what you are."
John pondered this. "You're right, I don't understand much
about it. I do notice people staring
when we go places, but I always thought it was because of us--that we were kids
or something. I do know a little bit
about what you're talking about. I don't
think Laurene's parents would want her going to the movies with me just because
I'm Catholic. They belong to some church
which teaches the Catholic Church is evil."
"A lot of my mom's family is the
same way down in Alabama. Momma says her
grandma's family stopped talking to her when she married a Catholic and became
one too. "
"So what are we going to do? There's not even one black girl in our school
and just a few in the public school. Do
you expect to go to school here until we graduate and never have a
girlfriend?"
Willie shrugged. "I don't know. Maybe I'll become a priest." He intended it as a joke, but John took it
seriously.
"I think about doing that."
Willie crinkled his brow. "And never get married, ever?"
"That wouldn't be so bad if I liked
what I was doing."
"Then you better have your fun with
women before then."
"That's why I want you to go to the
movies with Marie, Laurene and me. Their
parents don't have to know--we'll just meet them at the theater."
Willie nodded. "You're going to end up getting us in a
lot of trouble, do you know that?"
John merely smiled.
Chapter 6
A twisted mind never recognizes its own faults: it exalts in them.
June 5
I'm done with fifth grade and I've
decided it's time to keep a journal. It
will help me focus my thoughts, because talking with other people gets me
nowhere. All the files on this computer
are encrypted and it will never be connected to the internet, so everything
will be completely private. I imagine a
good computer hacker could eventually get into everything, but I don't expect
any such person will have access to this, so I feel free to be as open as I
want.
It's so strange to think about how
different I am than everyone I know, even the parents who brought me into this
world. It's not just intelligence--the
other kids and my teachers have no idea how smart I am and I've learned not to
show off anymore. While I still display
it around my parents, they take it for granted and have given up on pushing me
too far ahead academically, which suits me just fine.
I suppose I think of myself as superior
to everyone I know. They just seem so
pitiful in their naive beliefs about life, especially their religious
superstitions. They merely accept what
they are taught, they haven't learned to think for themselves. Even the ones who rebel do so thoughtlessly. They might not like restrictions, but they
haven't explored the roots of their resentment.
More and more, I'm beginning to feel I
have an unlimited, unrestricted future ahead of me, though I don't talk about
this with anyone because I'm not sure where it's leading yet myself. I am fascinated by people in history who used
power as they saw fit, not by others' standards. Hitler is almost universally condemned, but I
admire his determination and drive, though his goals seemed pointless. Still, he allowed no one else to dictate to
him standards of right and wrong--not society, the Church, nor anyone
else. I am sure he came to realize, as I
have, that the only authority that counts is one's own will.
My parents are hopeless in many ways and
don't know me any better than most strangers do. They deny the existence of God, yet they
refuse to follow it to its logical conclusion:
If there is no God, there is no such thing as right and wrong. Every value, without exception, is purely
subjective. I'm only eleven years old,
and I figured that out myself. Most
atheist writers are like my parents.
While they want to discard traditional moral systems founded in faith,
they are just as eager to replace it with some form of humanistic values. To me, that's a complete contradiction in
terms. To be human is to have the
ability to make a free choice about which values one will embrace--or
reject. Society's moral restrictions
have meaning only if they can be enforced.
Therefore, if I violate those standards without being caught, (which I
have done big time!) I will gladly do so, but not simply for the sake of
breaking rules. I need a reason or a
desire to do so. For example, while it
is easy to steal, I have no desire or need to do so. My parents provide me with any material thing
I really want (plus a lot I don't) and the risks involved in thievery, while
slight, are something I see no reason to risk.
At some point, if there is a thrill in it, then I can see myself doing
it, but I won't stupid choices.
Basically, I'm still confused about the
direction I want to take with my life.
The choices most people make in terms of careers hold no appeal for me,
I'm sure not going to follow in my father's footsteps. Whatever I do, it's going to include a
healthy dose of hedonism. I might as
well enjoy everything I can during this life, because death brings it to a
screeching halt. I know one thing: I'm sure not going to tie myself down to one
woman and raise children--that's for the rest of the sheep in this world. I'm a wolf.
"We're freshmen now and going to the
same school. I don't know what the big
deal is." Laurene was leaning over
the cafeteria table, staring earnestly at John, who was extremely
uncomfortable.
"You know how I feel about
you," he ventured. "The last
year has been wonderful. But we're just
so young. I don't think it's
healthy."
"We're not talking marriage, silly,
just going steady."
"You said it yourself," John
objected. "We're only freshmen and
I just think that going steady makes people possessive and makes it harder for
them to make friends and get involved in other activities."
Laurene's eyes flashed with anger and
John broke into a sweat. The
conversation was not going at all the way he had envisioned it would.
"You're just getting stuck-up. The first freshman ever to start at
quarterback for the varsity football team, and now you're suddenly too good for
everyone--especially me."
"Laurene, that's not it at all. Why can't it just the way it has been? I don't want that to change, we've been such
close friends."
"That's just the point. I thought we were something more than
friends, or do you treat all girls the same you treat me?" It was an unfair accusation, but John didn't
want to escalate things.
"You know I don't and now you've got
me all twisted around. I know I haven't
said it very well, and that Willie giving Marie that ring has brought this all
on, but I'm just not ready for this, not yet.
It doesn't mean I care any less--I've never loved another girl like
you."
Her demeanor chilled even more. "Did you know I've already been asked
out by a couple of upperclassmen?"
A throbbing ache began in John's stomach,
but he was determined not to let it show.
"That doesn't surprise me.
You're the most beautiful girl in the whole school."
The compliment didn't soften her up a
bit. "Maybe I should accept."
"That's up to you, but I would hope
you wouldn't do it just to upset me."
The girl straightened and smoothed out
her skirt under the table. "Well, I
guess that's that. I'll see you around
school." She stood and walked away
curtly, leaving John in depressed silence.
Not long after she departed, Willie sat
down beside him.
"What's up? She didn't look too happy."
"Yeah, and it's your fault,"
John snapped. "Why did you give
that ring to Marie and start all this "going steady" crap? I thought that was junior high stuff."
"Hey, you better wake up, my
friend. This is high school and there is
a lot of competition around here--I've seen plenty of guys giving Laurene and
Marie the eye when they walk down the hall.
You better hang on for dear life."
"That's not the way I see it. Like I told her, we're too young to get
serious. If our feelings for each other
are real and deep, they'll last and we'll have plenty of time to act on them
later."
"Oh, that's real sweet. You sound like Sister Rose. This is the real world, Johnny, and girls
don't have the time or patience for that kind of idealistic shit. You either take hold, or she will fly away, believe
me."
"I guess I'll just have to take that
chance, Willie."
Willie clapped him on the shoulder. "I hope you don't end up regretting it,
bro."
It was tough to keep a proper perspective
on everything. Going into the fourth
game of the season, the Scottsdale High Warriors were undefeated, a drastic
turnaround from the previous year when the team had won only two games. One of the main differences was a freshman
quarterback who was physically and mentally mature far beyond his 14
years. John stood just over six feet
tall and weighed a solid 175 pound, with none of the awkwardness one might
expect in a youth his age. His passing arm
was already being talked about and scouted by college coaches, and every one of
his receivers had stories to tell about the hardest-thrown balls they had ever
caught.
Everyone in the school suddenly seemed to
be his friend and he did his utmost to respond, though he was embarrassed by
all the attention. With all the
challenges of high school as well as the heavy demands from football, John
realized he was seeing almost nothing of Laurene. He tried to find her during lunch break
several times, but she was always surrounded by a group of friends, mostly
other cheerleaders on the junior varsity squad, of which she was a member. Football practices kept him late after
school, then he always made an effort to take care of his studies before he was too tired, so he
wasn't running into her outside like they did during the summer. It bothered him that he was seeing her even
less now then he did when they were in separate schools the year before. He often lay awake late at night, and
thoughts of her evoked hollow feelings of
emptiness.
The fifth game of the season was
Homecoming and they were pitted against their traditional arch-rival, the
Paradise Valley Mustangs. The older
players hated them with a particular passion because they had lost four years
in a row to them. Coach Howard's
pre-game talk was short and to the point.
He came out of his office after the players were completely dressed and
sitting quietly on benches in the locker room.
He came into the middle of the group, placed his hands on his hips, and
simply started into the distance for a while.
There was almost complete stillness, the tension heightened by the
occasional sound of a cleated foot shifting on the tile floor.
Howard finally spoke, a gravelly,
powerful voice that instantly commanded attention. "I'm going to ask two things from you
today. Number one: Think out there. The Mustangs have been running the same exact
offense for a decade and there won't be any surprises. You know your assignments. Second, and most importantly, don't play just
to win, or for me, or even for the school.
Play for each other, hold each other accountable and leave every ounce
of energy you have out on that field.
Let's do it."
They huddled with a unified roar then
flew out of the locker room and onto the field.
The home stands were filled to capacity, a never-seen sight in recent
years and as the team sprinted by, the crowd whooped in wild abandon. Across the turf, the visitors' stands were
equally packed and they greeted the Warriors' appearance with boos and hoots of
derision.
As the team fell into place for
calisthenics, John drank in the scene.
The mid-October evening was warm--too warm for football, but he didn't
notice. He felt like a gladiator in the
Roman Coliseum and he was certain the nervousness he felt was no less than what
they had felt facing death. More than
anything, he dreaded failure--he didn't want to let his teammates down,
especially those who had suffered such bitter defeats against this same team
for three straight years.
Mechanically and smoothly, his body
performed the exercises while his mind ran play after play. This was the part he hated most. Once the game began, he would shift into
another gear, but during the pre-game phase, he had to fight off anxiety that
verged on a panic attack. As it dragged
on, his bowels turned to water. In just
a few minutes, he would have to run to the locker room for his pre-game trip to
the toilet, which was now a running joke among his teammates. They had come to consider it a form of good
luck.
Ten minutes before kickoff, John cut
short his passing drills and sprinted toward the locker room.
"There he goes," Willie
shouted. "He's loose and full of
juice!" John whacked him on the
helmet as he ran by.
Even his deepest fears beforehand didn't
match the horrible start to the game.
Having won the coin toss, the Warriors elected to receive the kickoff,
which Willie returned to the 35-yard line.
He was the only other freshman starter, a wide receiver with blazing
speed and fantastic hands--John's favorite target. It didn't hurt that they had spent their
youth playing Pop Warner football together.
On the first play from scrimmage, John
called for a short pass over the middle to his fullback. As he dropped back to pass, an outside linebacker
blitzed him from the blind side, hitting him just as he released the ball. It floated in a wobbly arc toward the
sideline, where one of the Mustang cornerbacks picked it out of the air and
raced into the end-zone. John looked up
just in time to see the celebration start as the visiting fans went crazy.
He was shaking his head as he neared the
bench.
Coach Howard approached and whacked down
on both shoulder pads. "Keep your
head in the game. There was nothing you
could do about that, they just happened to call the perfect play. Get ready for the next series."
The entire team seemed unnerved by the
quick score and it defused the tremendous emotion they had brought into the
game. Willie bobbled the ensuing kickoff
and was dropped inside the 15-yard line.
The Mustang tacklers leaped to their feet and pumped their fists as they
sprinted back to their bench.
John opted for a conservative call, a
handoff to his tailback on a sweep to the right side. The exchange went smoothly, but as the runner
tried to make a sharp cut upfield behind a blocker, he met the free safety who
came in unblocked and at full speed.
There was a thunderous collision and the ball popped loose and bounded
inside the ten. John made a dive for it,
but one of the Mustang lineman pulled it in with a quick grab as other bodies
piled on. Two plays later, the Mustangs
scored again, making it 13-0 as they missed the extra point.
This time when he returned to the bench
area, Coach Howard was shaking his head.
"Damn, you'd think we could get the breaks, just once, wouldn't
you?"
"We're not giving up, coach, I swear
it" John said, mustering as much conviction as he could.
When John stepped up behind center for
the next series, he lookes across at the opposing players and saw the wild
emotion that was now utterly lacking in his teammates. The middle linebacker pointed at him and
roared, "You're mine, McDonugh, all mine.
They shouldn't send a baby in to play quarterback!" His teammates roared with laughter and John
momentarily forgot the snap count and play.
For the first time, they managed to carry
out an offensive play without a turnover, a five-yard gain on an off-tackle
run. A bit of confidence surged back
into the young quarterback. On the next
play, another run, he glanced over and saw Willie's defensive man in single
coverage, playing up tight on the young receiver.
"Blue, blue!" John yelled,
calling an audible. "Y-55,
Y-55!" It was a play that called
for Willie to sprint straight downfield for the long ball, a play they both
loved. It worked to perfection as Willie
blew past his started defender and broke into the clear. John's protection was perfect and he lofted a
gently arcing pass that would allow Willie to run under it. He never saw the free safety, who had dropped
deep when the ball was first snapped and now played it like a center fielder
waiting on a fly ball. He flashed in
front of Willie just as the ball began to settle and sprinted down the
sideline.
"Dammit!" John cursed,
sprinting at an angle that would allow him to cut off the runner. For the second time on the same play, he
failed to see a defensive player. this
one, a two-hundred fifty pound lineman, flattened him with a crushing
block. John was momentarily stunned,
then felt a sharp pain in his left hand.
Holding it up, he saw that his little finger was jutting off at an
impossible angle, dislocated and possibly broken. He rose and staggered toward the bench, then
huddled over and cradled the injured finger in his right hand.
Coach Howard and the trainers came
running out.
"Jesus, what happened?"
John held up his hand for inspection and
the coach shook his head ruefully.
"You're out, John. See what
you can do for him, Butch." Butch
was the team's trainer, and he too shook his head when he saw the damage.
"Dislocated, not broken," he
announced after taking a close look.
"Can you pop it back in place?"
John asked.
"We should get you to a doctor,
Johnny."
"Come on, Butch, just give it a try,
please?"
"You still won't be able to
play."
"Just do it."
The trainer took a firm grip on John's
left hand, grasped the end of his little finger and after pausing to collect
himself, gave it a sharp jerk.
Excruciating pain shot through the joint and John grunted explosively as
it snapped into place, seemingly aligned but swelling rapidly. The trainer plunged it into a bucket of ice
water.
In the meantime, with a three touchdown
cushion, the Mustangs were playing with less intensity, while the Warriors were
unable to score. The half ended with a
20-0 lead for the visitors.
When Howard joined them at halftime, the
group was completely subdued. John hung
his head and swished his hand around in the ice water.
"Boys, I know you're leaving it all
out there and I want you to keep doing that.
Sometimes things just don't fall your way, no matter how hard you
try. That's one of the tough lessons in
life. No matter what happens out there, if you give your best for each other,
I'll be proud of you."
John was suddenly filled with anger at
himself, taking the full blame for his team's predicament. "Coach," he announced, "I want
to go back in this half."
Howard looked at Butch, who shook his
head. "Not with that hand."
"No, I'm all right," John
insisted. "The ice has taken down
the swelling and all you have to do is tape it up real tight. I mean it, Coach. Put me in for the first series and if I can't
do it, I'll take myself out, I promise."
Howard nodded. "Butch, see what you can do."
The trainer returned with a roll of tape
and took John's hand. "It's gonna hurt to do it right, Johnny. I'll have to tape it to your ring
finger."
"Go for it."
As the tape was wound and tightened
around the two digits, it was all John could manage to keep from groaning with agony. When it was completed, the two fingers were
virtually immobilized, and a sharp throbbing cut through his hand with each
heartbeat. Yet somehow, the pain enabled
him to focus his concentration on the task ahead. He had always been quiet with the team to
this point, but he suddenly felt it was time to exert some leadership. He stood and faced the other players.
"Defense, it's up to you to get us
started. Stuff them on that first series
and we'll take it down for the TD. We're
not going to let these bastards celebrate on our home field again." He held out his hand for a team huddle, and
his teammates responded, not with a wild burst of emotion, but a grim determination. They were on a mission.
The second half was a mirror image of the
first, with the Warriors dominating the visitors in every phase of the
game. While every snap of the ball
brought a burst of pain into John's hand, it did not hinder his ability to pass
or hand off. When the defense stopped
the Mustangs on the first series, John, as promised, took his team in for a
score with a beautiful corner pattern to Willie, who made a diving, fingertip
catch.
After several exchanges of possession,
John led the offense on an extended drive from deep in their own territory,
where Jimmy Valdez, their tailback, carried it in from inside three yards. It was 20-14 midway through the final
quarter.
On the next possession, Paradise Valley
drove the ball methodically downfield.
Though their drive finally stalled on the Warriors 40, they punted the
ball inside the ten. There was only 1:10
left in the game, and their fans were already beginning the celebration. As John huddled with his teammates he glanced
around to see their condition. Everyone
was exhausted, leaning on their knees with their hands, trying to conserve
precious energy.
"I know you're dog-tired, but this
is it, do or die. Suck it up one last
time, guys. This game is still ours if
we want it bad enough."
The first play was an sideline pattern at
fifteen yards. The Mustang defensive
backs were playing loose coverage and John threw a strike to Billy Wilson, a
senior wide receiver who stepped out of bounds with only eight seconds expiring
off the clock. All nervousness evaporated,
John felt in total control.
Returning to the huddle, the players had
more spring in their step, and John's intense eyes infused confidence in all of
them. "Same play, other side,
Willie. On one. Ready, Break!" They clapped hands in unison on the word
"break" and sprinted to their positions.
On the other side of the field, John
fired a bullet to Willie, who pulled the pass in and casually stepped out of
bounds.
"Like candy from a blind baby,"
he said back in the huddle.
With deadly precision, John led them
downfield with five straight completions, the last of which was pulled in by
his fullback on the eight-yard line with eight seconds left. John called his team's final timeout. The crowds on both sides of the field were
cheering themselves hoarse, but he no longer heard anything. He jogged to the sideline and calmly told
Coach Howard the plays he had selected, then returned to the huddle.
John knew there was time for two
plays. The first would involve the two
ends in a crossing pattern right on the goal line. As he approached the line, John studied the
defensive formation and from the nervous mannerisms of several of the
linebackers, he was sure a blitz was coming.
He felt even better about the play he had just called, because that
would unplug the middle.
When the ball was snapped, he took a
quick, short drop and just as he'd expected, two of the linebackers rushed
across the line of scrimmage. The free
safety came up on one of the backs flaring into the right flat and Willie broke
into the clear on the goal line as his teammate crossed behind him, their two
defenders getting in each other's way.
John fired a hard pass, knowing Willie could handle anything he
released. He led him perfectly and John
was ready to begin signalling a touchdown when the ball skipped off the back of
the backjudge, who had tried and failed to duck the ball which skipped above
everyone's head and out of the end zone.
John was instantly enraged, and even
though he knew the referee was considered part of the field, he pulled off his
helmet and slammed it to the ground to express his displeasure. An instant later, a yellow flag dropped
beside him.
"Unsportsmanlike conduct," the
head referee announced. "That's a
fifteen-yard penalty."
John could scarcely refrain from
screaming defiance and instead roughly pulled his helmet back into place over
his head. When the referee had finished
stepping off the penalty and placed the ball on the 23-yard line, John walked
up to him, pointed a finger in his direction and announced, "We're still
going to win this game."
"I'm not against that, son, if you
can make it happen."
When he knelt in the huddle, his
teammates were cursing the officials.
"All right, cut the shit." His teammates instantly grew quiet, John
never swore. There's nothing we can do
about that now, let's get focused. We're
winning this game right now. Y-hook,
just over the goal line Willie, it's
going to come in hot." They locked
eyes for a moment, and John had no doubts his friend would come through if he
did his part. "On two, on two. Ready, Break!"
As he approached the line, he was
completely unaware of the raucous crowd noise.
He made only a cursory examination of the defense. Whatever they did wasn't going to
matter. John's sole focus was on the
execution of the play. The pain in his
finger was non-existent. All fatigue was
washed from his body and the whole scene seemed to slip into slow motion.
When the ball was snapped into his hands,
he took a deep drop, staring downfield to his left, the opposite side from
Willie pass route. The tight end and one
of the backs did sharp slant toward the left side of the field, drawing more
defenders. The other end went deep over
the middle, drawing attention from both his man and the free safety. His linemen held their blocks perfectly.
John suddenly snapped his head back to
the right, zeroed in on Willie as he crossed the five-yard line, then fired the
pass with every bit of strength he possessed.
As Willie crossed the goal line, he nearly stopped in his tracks from a
full sprint, spun, and found the ball nearly at his fingertips. He made a stab at it, bobbled it, then took a
vicious hit from a linebacker trailing the play. As he was going down, he made another stab
for the ball, latched onto it with his fingertips and pulled it to his
chest. The gun sounded as the referee
raised his arms.
John and Willie sprinted and tackled each
other to the turf as the rest of the team piled on in celebration. Warriors' fans streamed from the stands, and
the few security people simply stepped aside as they mobbed the players on the
field. The referees didn't even try to
restore order for an extra point try.
When the players finally untangled, John
rose, removed his helmet and had his hair tousled by a thousand people as he
slowly made his way toward the locker room.
So this is how it feels to be a
hero. The thought made him laugh at
himself. It was just a game--but it was
a tremendous feeling.
He was suddenly grabbed around the neck
and squeezed from behind.
"Way to go, Johnny," a familiar
voice sounded in his ear. "What a
stud!" John turned and smiled
widely at Gwen, who was now a senior and a varsity cheerleader for the
team. She was just as sweaty as he was.
"We couldn't have done it without
you," he said.
"Sure, sure. You never even glanced over the whole
time. How's your hand?"
John held it up. "It's still there, not too bad."
"You know that was the greatest
thing I've ever seen in my life, don't you?"
"Thanks, Gwennie, but I had the easy
part. Willie made the catch."
"Salt and Pepper, shakin' it
up!" she teased, doing a little dance.
"Hey, what are your plans for the rest of the night?"
John frowned in puzzlement. "What do you mean--go home, like
usual."
"Not tonight. You're going out with us."
"Who is 'us'?"
"The rest of the squad and me."
"You mean your cheerleader
friends? Now why would I do that? They're all juniors and seniors, not to
mention Lisa's boyfriend, who I know will be there. You know I get along with almost everybody,
but Chuck is a total jerk."
"Strange you should mention that,
because she dropped him and he won't be around.
Also, Tony Fredericks and Eddie Rodriguez will be there."
"They're good guys, but we just play
football together. It's not like we're
close friends."
"Come on, Johnny, it'll be fun. I already told them you would be there. Don't make me look bad."
"What, did you tell them it was your
turn to babysit?"
Gwen pretended to be mildly upset. "No, silly, I'm just tired of seeing you
home all the time. You need to go out
and celebrate a little. Gee, you just
won the biggest football game in this school's history in the last second. Live it up!"
John finally relented. "OK, but only if Willie and Marie can
come, too."
"No problem! Meet us in front of the gym when you're done
showering and dressing."
John looked around. "I'll let Mom know. Have you seen her?" Even as he asked, he saw his mother waving excitedly
from the edge of the crowd which was still escorting the team toward the locker
room.
It was John and Willie's first high
school party, held at the house of one of the cheerleaders whose parents were
away for the weekend. Music blared and
alcohol flowed freely. When they walked
in the front door, a chorus of voices rose in greeting and someone thrust a
beer in his hand and slapped him on the back.
He held it up and stared at it as though it were a foreign object. He set it down at the first opportunity,
exchanging it for a can of Coke.
In spite of his initial misgivings, he began
to enjoy himself. He had always
interacted easily with others and they were drawn to him by his easygoing
mannerisms. After chatting with a number
of people and exchanging stories with some of his teammates, John took a seat
with Willie and Marie on a large couch in the crowded living room. They had scarcely settled in when Lisa
Stuart, the cheerleader who Gwen said had just dropped her boyfriend, flopped
into his lap and put her arms around his neck.
She reeked of alcohol and John looked over to Willie for help, who
merely smiled at his predicament.
"Fantastic game, John," she
said, slurring the words ever so slightly.
"We were going insane over there."
"Thanks, it was fun."
"I 'spose you heard the news."
"What's that, Lisa?"
"Chuck and me. We're not seeing each other anymore."
John nodded as sympathetically as he
could manage, trying to figure a way out of the situation. "I'm sorry to hear that."
"No, it's all good. He's a total asshole. I should'a dumped him a long time ago. Who're you dating?"
"Nobody, really."
"So why don't we go out
sometime?"
John reddened. "I'm only a freshman."
"That's OK, you're really cute and
Gwen says you're the nicest guy she knows.
I don't know any other sisters who would say that about their younger brothers."
John struggled to come up with a line to
deflect the offer and was looking around for help when the arrival of several
newcomers riveted his attention on the entrance to the room. The junior varsity cheerleaders had entered
the house, including Laurene. In a
moment of panic, he was tempted to hurl Lisa off his lap onto the floor. It was too late. Laurene spotted them, stopped in her tracks
and stared in disbelief. Then she spun
on her heels and stormed from the room.
"Excuse me, Lisa," he said,
trying to gently slide her off his lap and
onto the couch, "I need to leave for a minute." She clung to him all the tighter and it took
several minutes of coaxing to get her to release her hold. John raced outside, a feeling of physical
nausea creeping over him, but Laurene was nowhere to be seen. The party was no longer any fun.
When he went inside, another problem had
arisen. Willie was standing in front of
the couch in a heated discussion with two seniors whom John only vaguely
recognized. As he neared, he could hear
the larger of the two challenging Willie.
"Well, why don't you just date
someone your own color, then?"
Marie huddled on the couch, frightened
and upset by the exchange.
"What's the problem here?" John
interrupted loudly. Others began to
gather around and someone turned down the music system.
"He's the problem," the same
boy said, pointing at Willie. "We
don't want him dating one of our girls?"
John turned to Marie. "Will you stand up a minute,
Marie?"
Still scared, she complied with John's
request. John spun her around and made a
show of inspecting her from head to toe, then turned back to the boys, arms
spread in a gesture of uncertainty.
"I don't see it," he announced.
"See what?" asked the shorter
of the two.
"You said, 'one of our girls,' but I
don't see any ownership tags on her." Several
people laughed and the tall blond boy drew himself to his full height in a
threatening posture.
"Don't be a smart-ass."
"Then don't stick your noses in
other people's business."
"This is our business. Blacks should date blacks, simple as
that."
"What grade are you two in?"
John asked, throwing them off-balance again.
"We're seniors, what about it?"
"I'm just surprised that anyone as
ignorant as you two could make it that far in school."
"That does it," the blond boy
shot back, "Let's go outside."
John held up his hands. "Look fighting won't settle
anything. Most people don't think the
way you do, and they're entitled to their opinions, just like you are to
yours. But that doesn't mean you can
force them on other people. If you knew Willie, you'd realize he's one of the
greatest guys you could ever want to meet."
The group around John threw their support
behind him, murmuring their agreement about his remarks.
The shorter brown-haired youth didn't
like the turn of events. "C'mon,
Pete, let's blow this place. I don't
like hanging out with niggers, anyway."
Willie started after the boy, but John
held him back. "Not worth it,
Willie," he cautioned.
It helped that everyone else in the room
sided with John and Willie, hooting and heckling the two unwelcome seniors, who
now saw that starting a fight with Willie and John would likely bring in about
half the players on the football team with them.
As they tried to leave, a heavy hand
gripped Pete by the shoulder and spun him around. Jake Provost, a huge offensive lineman who
protected John fiercely on the field, had just come in and caught the last of
the exchange.
"Listen, dickhead," he
bellowed, thrusting his face close to that of the startled boy, "You even
look the wrong way at my main men again and I'll tear your fucking head off and
shit down your neck. Got it? Now get the fuck outta here!"
The two meekly exited while John looked
back to Willie, studying him for a reaction.
"Sorry, Willie," was all he
could manage.
"Hey, don't worry about me, I've
heard worse. I'm not the one to feel
sorry for." He motioned with his
head toward the couch where Marie was crying, her face cupped in her hands.
"I think it's time for us to leave,
too," John said. Gwen was ready to
leave as well, having seen the ugly exchange.
Back home, John was sorely tempted to
call Laurene, but it was after midnight and he decided to wait until the
morning. As he settled into bed, he kept
seeing the hurt in her eyes as she realized Lisa was planted on his lap, arms
enfolding him. He began rehearsing his
explanation, hoping only that Laurene would realize there was nothing he could
have done short of being extremely rude or physical that would have prevented
the situation from developing as it had.
He couldn't sleep. The more he tried to relax, the faster his
thoughts piled on top of each other and made him more tense by the moment. He rolled first left, then right; he tried
curling up into a fetal position on his side.
Nothing worked. When the clock
finally told him another three hours had drifted by, he threw off his covers,
donned some clothing and quietly exited the house.
The Simms' front yard was not fenced and
Laurene's bedroom had a window facing the street. John walked resolutely across the lawn,
trying to gain confidence by affecting a bold outward appearance. It wasn't working. His heart pounded wildly, his mouth going
dry. He closed the gap to the window,
paused, raised his knuckles to rap lightly and nearly screamed as the curtains
parted and Laurene's face appeared in the gloom. As it was, he jumped back and he was sure he
saw a slight smile curl her lips. He
grimaced as the windows grated open.
"What do you want?" she began,
every bit as coldly as he had feared.
"Can we talk?"
"I opened the window, didn't
I?"
John licked his dry lips and moved
closer, noticing with dismay that laurene was glaring at him with thinly
disguised contempt, perhaps even hatred.
John found himself scarcely able to speak, a sudden panic sweeping
through him, taking away his breath.
"Uh, I--I'm really sorry about
tonight," he gasped, making feeble motions with his hands in a poor effort
to expand on his apology. Jesus, I can't breathe! He forced himself to draw in several deep
breaths, regardless of how ridiculous it might appear to Laurene. He had to get control of himself. After what seemed an eternity, but was
actually only a few seconds, he regained some semblance of composure. Laurene had said nothing, apparently taking
some delight in his discomfiture.
"Look," he started again,
"you can see how shook up I am about all of this. I couldn't sleep, so I had to come see
you. Honestly, Lisa just came up and sat
on my lap. She was just flirting and it
was all very embarrassing because I didn't know how to handle it."
"Right, I could see how much you
hated it. I guess it never occurred to
you to ask her politely to get up."
"I
did try, seriously, but it wasn't easy.
She was a little drunk. When you
left I tried to get up right away, but she wouldn't let me. I swear it, Laurene, there is nothing going
on with her at all."
"It doesn't matter to me--We're not
going steady or anything, remember? You
haven't even talked to me the last few weeks.
You're free to do whatever you wish--and so am I."
John felt helpless and defeated and
simply nodded. "I know I haven't
seen you much lately, it wasn't something I did on purpose. I just wanted to explain about tonight."
"Fine, you've done that. I understand, thank you."
Her demeanor left no further room for
discussion. John stared intently at her
for a moment, trying to gauge how she was actually feeling, but could get no
further than the icy exterior. "OK,
thanks for listening. I guess I better
let you get back to sleep. Good
night."
"Good night," she replied
shortly, even as she pulled the window closed with exaggerated abruptness.
Falling back onto her bed, Laurene felt a
mixture of satisfaction and sorrow.
John's slow gait and hunched shoulders had clearly indicated his pain as
he left and she had a momentary urge to call him back. Yet his behavior had to have
consequences. She knew that he had been
telling the truth about Lisa's actions at the party, John had never lied to
her. Still, he could have handled the
situation better--she had actually walked away from the party very slowly and
given him plenty of time to catch up, but he hadn't done it. Also, she was still hurting deeply from his
refusal to go steady with her and felt justified in inflicting a bit of
punishment. He deserved to stew for a
while.
Across the street, John didn't fall
asleep until after five am. At six, his
brothers woke him up wanting to talk about the football game, they simply
couldn't restrain themselves. When they
finally eased up on him, he slept until noon.
Chapter 7
It is a simple fact of the human condition that one's deepest desires simply seem impossible.
Though he made it a point to be outside
in front of his house frequently for the
rest of the weekend, he did not see Laurene at all, nor could he work up
the nerve to visit her or call her. He
couldn't understand what was happening.
They had been so close for the past year and it was just unimaginable
that he was now afraid to approach her.
Her bedroom curtains remained drawn, though he thought he saw them move
slightly several times.
Laurene knew John was doing everything he
could to reestablish contact by loitering out front, but the hurts he had
inflicted were beginning to eat away at her.
He had basically ignored her for weeks and now he was expecting her to
come to him. She wouldn't give him the
satisfaction.
When Monday came, things were no better
for John at school. Laurene avoided him
entirely and he was at a loss as to what to do.
As first one week, then a second began to pass in the same way, he grew
desperate. He made one attempt at
reconciliation on Wednesday of that second week. Unable to take the widening breach any
longer, he approached Laurene as she sat at lunch surrounded by a large group
of friends, as was always the case. As
he neared and stood before them, conversation died and everyone's attention was
suddenly fixed on John.
He smiled and nodded to the group,
masking the fear roiling inside him.
With witnesses, he was determined to make it impossible for her to
ignore him.
"Hello," he said to the whole
group, then focused his attention on Laurene.
"I was wondering if you would like to go to the movies with me on
Saturday." Good, nice and
direct. Let's see her ignore me now.
Laurene flushed crimson. "I, I'm sorry--I can't make it, I have
other plans." Several of the girls
looked knowingly at each other and giggled.
John felt like disappearing.
"Uh, all right. Mmmm, maybe another time soon."
Laurene nodded uncertainly and John made
an awkward exit, his ears singed by the whispers and snickers that trailed
him. It was complete humiliation.
Beside her, Laurene's best friend, Katie
Feser, wasn't laughing with the rest of the girls who were in the know.
"I don't understand why you're doing
this, Laurene. There's not a nicer guy
in the whole school than John McDonough."
"Don't lecture me, Katie. He had his chance. Besides, I'm just going out on a date,
there's no law against that. It's not a
big deal."
"But with Stan Lawton? The guy is a complete idiot."
Laurene was indignant. "How do you know? You've never even talked to him. He's been a complete gentleman with me and
he's really funny."
"Yeah? You'd better be careful if even half the
stories floating around about him are true.
Are you sure you're just not trying to get at John by going out with
him?"
"Maybe."
"Well, if you want my opinion, I
think this can lead to nothing but trouble."
"I'm not asking your opinion, thank
you very much."
It had simply gone from bad to worse. Laurene continued to ignore John all week,
despite the fact that he had made a point of greeting her whenever he could,
which she responded to cursorily every time.
He had difficulty studying and each night after football practice, he
sat near the front window, watching for some sign of Laurene outsider her house
where he might have an opportunity to speak with her.
On Friday, after another week without a
single conversation with Laurene, the final home game of the season rolled
around. John's high school nightmare
began at lunch. When he and Willie had
finished eating, they walked with several of their teammates toward the gym,
where they would spend the aternoon in preparation for the game. Football players were exempt from fifth hour
classes on game days, and sixth hour was P.E which was used for practice at
that time of year.
As they rounded a corner of the
cafeteria, John nearly ran into Laurene.
She was walking with Stan Lawton, hand-in-hand. The broad smile on her face froze and John
felt as though he'd been hit with a blow to the stomach. She quickly regained her composure.
"Hello, John," she said
casually.
"Hi," was all he could
manage. As he moved around the couple,
he shot a glance at Stan, who returned the look with a self-satisfied grin of
triumph. The group of players John was
with fell silent, they were all aware of John's feelings for Laurene. Willie spoke first as they neared the gym
entrance.
"That's really rough, sorry. But I did try to warn you."
John only nodded. Deep misery had invaded his soul.
Laurene thought she might be in
love. Stan was completely unlike the
person her friends had described. He had
been completely kind and thoughtful on their first date, then had called her
nightly and they talked for hours. He
was so much more mature than John in every manner. When he had asked her to be his girlfriend
the night before, she couldn't think of a single reason to refuse.
Yet as they walked away from John, she
felt guilty over the decision. The hurt
in his eyes was obvious. Still, she owed
him nothing and it wasn't as though she were getting married. She decided she had been too harsh with him
lately and that she would at least reestablish their friendship. Stan sensed the directions of her thoughts.
"Worried about McDonough?"
"Not really, but I think his
feelings are hurt. We've been friends
for a long time."
"My guess is that he must not be too
smart."
"What do you mean?"
"Meaning that if I had been in his
place, I would have done everything I could to keep you from dating other
people."
"We're just friends," Laurene
said defensively.
"That's not the way he looks at
you."
A look of regret shadowed her face, but
she shrugged it off. "He'll get
over it."
Stan squeezed her hand. "He'll have to, if I have anything to
say about it."
"John?" The sound of Laurene's voice made his heart
soar.
"Hi."
"I'm sorry about the game
tonight."
"That's all right. We deserved to lose."
"You played really well. It was the defense that lost the game."
"We lost the game as a team and I
certainly messed up on a few plays."
"Anyway, I just called to apologize
for the way I've acted lately."
He was filled with hope. "And I'm sorry I wasn't paying more
attention to you earlier in the semester.
I was stupid."
"I know you were busy. Anyway, I hope we can still be friends. I miss that."
"Of course we can. Maybe we can hang out tomorrow night over at
Willie's--he's having a pool party for Marie's birthday."
It was the wrong suggestion, it was met
by a long pause.
"I'm afraid not, John. Stan and I are sort of going steady
now."
Though he did his best to conceal the
pain, he knew it was clearly revealed in his dulled voice. "I didn't know that and I'm sorry I made
you uncomfortable asking." He drew
a deep breath. "So I guess we'll
see each other around school?"
"Sure--you're not mad at me, are
you?"
"For what? You haven't done anything wrong. I'll see you on Monday."
As they hung up, John realized he hadn't
been this miserable since his father had died.
In the morning, he rose early and idly
sat at the kitchen table, staring at the phone.
Chris and Curtis, now two irrepressible sixth-graders, tripped into the
kitchen.
"What's the matter with you? Chris
asked bluntly, instantly reading John's frame of mind. "Bummed out about the game?"
"No, it's nothing you two would
understand."
"Oh, yeah, give us a try."
John eyed them skeptically, then went
ahead. "Laurene is dating a junior,
a basketball player named Stan Lawton."
The twins knew all about John's
infatuation with their neighbor. The two
of them were beginning to fight for the interests of her younger sister.
"Why would she want to do
that?" Curtis asked. "You two
are best friends."
"We were best friends," John corrected. "That was the problem. She wanted to get more serious and go steady,
and when I wouldn't she started going out with Stan. Now they're boyfriend and girlfriend."
"Maybe you should fight him,"
Chris suggested.
John chuckled. "Don't be silly, that wouldn't help a
bit. To be honest, I have no good reason
to be upset, she has every right to date other people. I guess I'll just have to be patient and wait
for them to break up."
Chris came up with another idea. "Why don't you go out with someone else? I'll bet that would get her attention."
"That's it!" Curtis
seconded. "Play the field,
homie!" He joked.
John laughed, these two would never let
him stay in a funk very long.
"Come on, guys, you know that's not
me. Besides, I don't have any desire to
go out with anyone else. If I did that,
it would only be to make Laurene jealous, and that wouldn't be very fair to the
girl I dated, would it?"
Since their breakthrough confrontation
that long-ago Saturday morning, the three brothers had grown ever closer, able
to express their thoughts and feelings far more freely than most siblings. Chris jumped back in to the conversation.
"Most guys aren't like that,
John. Mom tells us all the time what a
great role-model you are, and she's right.
All of our friends talk about how friendly you are with them, even when
we're not around--most other high-schoolers treat guys our age like dirt."
"It doesn't have much to do with me,
boys--whatever is good in me came directly from Mom and Dad. We are lucky to have the best mother in the
world. Besides, I can't be too much of a
jerk if I decide to be a priest someday."
Theresa possessed a faith that permeated
every aspect of her life--and theirs.
She didn't have to talk about it, she lived it every day. It had helped her cope with the death of her
husband as well as given her the strength to raise her boys since. Among the children, John had emerged as the
family leader, even Gwen idolized him.
The mention to his brothers and Willie about his consideration of the
priesthood was more than idle chatter, it was something that often crossed his
mind.
The younger boys nodded agreement and the
conversation came to a close.
"Hey," John said, "Let's
go toss the football around."
It was their favorite, especially since
John had become a genuine football star.
The twins faced off, growled, went into three-point stances and butted
against one another in their excitement.
"I'm Dick Butkus!" Chris
roared. "You're dogmeat,
buddy!"
"All right, animals," John interrupted,
grabbing each by the back of the neck, "outside with it."
Snagging the ball from the hallway
closet, the three raced outside and began running patterns and throwing
passes. The twins were in a peewee
football program and displayed the same coordination and intensity John himself
possessed, though they were running backs and defensive backs instead of
playing quarterback.
Even though they were considerably
smaller than John, he did not ease up much on the speed of his passes and the
two youngsters gathered them in with pliant fingers, rarely dropping a
pass. Their fun had gone on for some
time when the roar of a high-powered engine shattered the early morning calm. A Blue Trans Am sped up the street and came
to a screeching halt in front of Laurene's house. John knew even before the door opened that
the driver was Stan Lawton. The twins
stopped running around and watched as Stan exited the car, while John tossed the
ball up and down to himself.
"Hey, McDonough," Stan called
out. "Giving the little clones a
workout? I guess after last night you
decided you could use the practice."
Chris and Curtis were instantly
indignant, but held their tongues, waiting on John's reaction.
"It never hurts," John replied
amiably, though he was irritated.
"We didn't play very well."
"You can say that again. Those guys really kicked your butts--Hey,
toss me a pass?" He jogged onto the
Simms' lawn toward the house, holding out his hands.
John snapped off a pass that would have
given Willie problems and Stan sidestepped the ball and made a feeble attempt
at it with his hands. He barely nicked
it with his fingertips and the ball spiraled on, speed unreduced. As John held his hands to his head, the ball
smashed the front picture window of the Wilson's living room.
The twins craned their heads first toward
the window, then to each other, and burst into laughter.
"Nice catch, Stan," Curtis
laughed. "Maybe next time you can
take off your stone mittens."
Stan's face was bright red. "You dickhead, you did that on
purpose."
"I thought you could catch,"
John shot back. "My brothers can
handle passes like that."
Their exchange was interrupted by the
sudden appearance of the entire Wilson family.
"My God, what is going on
here?" Mr. Wilson demanded.
"It's my fault, sir," John
admitted. "I just put a football
through your window. I threw a pass to
Stan and I'm afraid I put too much on it."
"That's just great, look at this
mess."
"I'm sorry, Mr. Wilson. I'll clean it up for you and put in a new
window this afternoon.. One of my uncles
does that kind of work and he taught me how to replace windows like that."
Laurene's mom spoke up. "I just wish you'd been more careful in
the first place, John. Then she turned
to her daughter. "No need to let
this interrupt your plans, Laurene. You
and Stan might as well get going."
"I'll get my things," she
replied, shooting a reproachful look at John, which further compounded his
feelings of guilt.
The cleanup was made more difficult by
the constant presence of Mrs. Wilson, who questioned John's every move., though
she knew nothing about the procedure.
John pointedly avoided any discussion about Laurene, and neither her
mother nor father volunteered any information about her day's activities. However, from the items she had taken with
her, it had been obvious she and Stan were going on some kind of picnic. John had avoided her eyes when she left,
feeling that she may have thought he had planned this stunt as a way to interrupt
her day with Stan. She made no effort to
say good-bye, and he passed the day immersed in gloom.
"Honey, I’m worried about you again. You just seem to be spending too much time
alone. Your friends call, but you never
seem to want to do anything with them.
And you're getting a bit fanatical about all this martial-arts
training."
Thor sighed. "Mom, they bore me. I don't mind socializing during school hours,
but I don't really feel the need to be with classmates on my own time. And I thought you liked my martial-arts
work--it's great discipline."
"I'm just concerned. I want you to be happy."
Thor laughed. "You've been saying that for years--and
I am happy. I just happen to like spending
time by myself. I'm never bored with
me."
She smiled. "I was talking with your father the
other night. He was thinking we should
invite you to sit in on one of our discussion sessions."
"You're talking about your humanist
group?"
"Yes, we're hosting it here at the
house tonight. You might find it very
interesting. The others would love to
have you there, and I wouldn't mind showing off what a little genius I
have."
That appealed to Thor's ego. "That might be all right. I did read all those books you gave me."
"The Ayn Rand books?"
Thor nodded.
"Then you would probably have a lot
to add to our discussion. Our group is
centered around her philosophy."
"I knew that from other
conversations you've had."
"So it's a yes?"
"What time does it start?"
"To your health, everyone,"
Lars said, holding his wine glass aloft.
Five other forty-something couples raised their glasses for the toast,
Thor included, though his glass was filled with soda.
The group lounged informally on several
large beige leather sofas in the Eriksson's huge sunken living room. On rough oaken shelves, several
fierce-looking Kachina dolls, wolf heads on human bodies, overlooked the
room. Navajo rugs decorated another
wall, flanked by symmetrical sand paintings.
The distinctively Southwest ornamentation lent an informal air to the
room that invited relaxation and conversation.
"So," Lars began, "what is
our topic for the evening?"
Brad Simmons, a pompous-looking man with
thinning blonde hair combed over his scalp, removed a clenched, unlit pipe from
his teeth. "I think we were going
to discuss the Objectivist basis for morality."
That caught Thor's attention; it was an
area that dominated much of his thought.
"Who would like to start?" Lars
asked. He and Barbara would act as
moderators since they were the hosts for the evening.
Brad's wife, Patti, cleared her
throat. "If you don't mind, I'd
like to share some thoughts on this."
She took a sip of wine before continuing. "For me, this is one of the triumphs of
Rand's Objectivist philosophy. She
begins by pointing out that morality can only have a meaning and a basis if
there is a basic value from which it springs.
For humans, that value is life itself, no other species has the capacity
to consciously recognize that. The
axiomatic basis for morality boils down to a very simple principle--life or
non-life. That is the basic choice we
all face as humans. We can all agree as
a matter of simple logic that we naturally choose life over non-life, unless we
are impaired in some manner. Building on that simple fact, the next principle
is not just to live, but to live well.
Ayn Rand's concise analysis of this
condition yields the obvious conclusion that we must first be concerned with
meeting our own basic needs before we can even turn to others and help them do
the same--her much misunderstood "enlightened selfishness" as it
is. A truly rational morality recognizes
this and builds from these essentials."
"Nicely put," Lars
commented. "I think you've
accurately summarized her views on this subject."
Janice Walters, an attractive blonde,
nodded her agreement. "It is so
simple, Lars. I remain amazed that so
many people in the world refuse to examine their moralities which are based in
fantasies about the supernatural."
"The world is still ruled by
fear," her husband, Mark added.
"People don't want to face the reality that this life is all we
have. They want to harbor some hopes
that there's something beyond, something better. It relieves them of the responsibility of
really having to do anything with their lives and gives them false hopes that
somehow, somewhere, everything will be made better. That's why the world is in such a
mess." He glanced over, taking note
of the young boy in their midst.
"By the way, I hope we're not boring you to death, Thor. You're probably wishing you had declined your
mother's invitation."
"Not at all," the boy
replied. "This is all very
interesting to me. I've never had the
chance to listen to a group of atheists discuss this topic, though I've read a
lot about it on my own."
His response fascinated all the
visitors. The final couple, Mike and
Sandra Hayes, exchanged surprised glances.
"Thor," Mike interjected, "we'd love to hear your ideas
on this, if you'd care to share them."
"I think I understand what everyone
has been saying so far," the boy began.
"and I read all the Ayn Rand books my mom gave to me, but I guess
I'm not convinced about some of her basic premises. As you were saying, Mrs. Walters, most people
want to anchor morality in some ultimate principles, specifically religious
ones. That takes an act of irrational
faith. On the other hand, Objectivism
asserts that morality springs from the basic principle that life is better than
non-life. It seems to me that accepting
that is just as much an act of faith because I don't see any evidence that life
is actually better than non-life." The
group was both astonished and taken aback by his opening presentation.
"Come now, Thor, that's the whole
point," His mother interjected.
"You wouldn't rather be dead than alive, would you?"
"Of course not, but that's a
judgment on my part, and it seems to be completely subjective. It expresses my preference, not some
independent, objective principle. If
Objectivism is rooted in rationalism, then why assert that life is preferable
to non-life? We all die eventually, and
no matter what we accomplish in this life, it all vanishes with our
deaths. The same is true of mankind as a
whole. We die as individuals and
eventually the human race will become extinct, just as most species in the past."
The group was nearly dumbfounded by his
display of reasoning and intellect.
"That's all very fascinating,
Thor," Mike commented. "So
what would you base morality on, then?"
The boy held his hands out. "In one way, nothing at all. Morality is a mental concept which we
abstract from individual actions. It's
not 'out there' as some independent reality which influences our actions. In the end, morality boils down to the
individual acts we either choose to do or not do, but there are no ultimate
standards by which to guide or judge them, merely our preferences at that very
moment."
The members of the group looked at one
another with some consternation.
"Son," Lars finally ventured,
"what you're describing is known as nihilism."
"That's me, dad. I'm a nihilist."
More shocked looks, and Thor's parents
looked at each other uncomfortably.
November
5
Most atheists are just as afraid of
reality as religionists are. My parents'
Ayn Rand group became unglued when I
contradicted their little philosophical system.
They got themselves so worked up that after a while, I pretended to see
the "wisdom" of their views.
My conversion was greeted with as much enthusiasm as a sinner's approach
to an altar call.
I "accepted" their claim that
life is the foundation for value and a rational basis for morality. But I don't give a flying fuck about the
value of their lives, nor any others--well, except my parents. I do care about my own, but as I said, that
is my personal choice and preference, there is nothing that compels me to
accept that other than the conditioning of society and some evolutionary
factors that are built into my genetic fabric.
Honestly, I wouldn't want everyone to
believe as I do. I would never bring
this up with my parents, but Nietzsche was right--There are only a very few
"Ubermensch" in this world who can rise above the restrictions of
human-imposed morality and choose their own destinies with absolute
freedom. I'm one of them, but I realize
that to actually live that out, I can't share it with others, it's far too
disturbing for them to comprehend, so I need to repress displays like the one
tonight.
Things are beginning to jell in my mind
that I can't quite voice. I feel like
Colossus astride the world and it's only a matter of time before I release my
full potentials. I won't let other
people or even society control my life, and that includes my parents. I may have to make accommodations for the
time being, but I will build for that day of absolute independence, it is the
destiny I choose.
Chapter 8
Seemingly minor incidents in human interactions can become the focal point of massive breaches in relationships.
The window-breaking incident marked a
turning point. Though Laurene did not
become hostile toward John, neither did she seek to further their recent
reconciliation. She greeted him
cordially enough when they passed, but she took no time to engage him in
conversation, nor allowed him any opportunity to do so. It was clear that their friendship, if it
existed at all, had been transformed.
When he kept busy, it wasn't so bad--but
there were far too many moments alone when a world of lost possibilities
pressed on him like a physical weight.
He was suddenly plagued by insomnia and fantasies of winning Laurene's
affections once again filled his restless nights, driving all peace away.
The situation was worsened by the arrival
of basketball season. Stan was the star
player, having been the leading scorer the previous year as a sophomore. He was less than pleased when both John and
Willie were the only two freshmen to make the varsity squad. He was even more disgusted when, within the
first week of practice, it became apparent that Coach Summers would put them in
the starting unit. Two of Stan's
friends, who were seniors and had started alongside him the previous year,
would be relegated to bench roles.
During a break at the start of the second
week of practice, Stan decided to press Summers on these developments. The coach had walked some distance from the
players and was leaning on the bleachers as he fished out a stick of gum, which
he habitually chewed. Stan approached,
completely at ease. He and the coach
were good friends, even off the court.
"Hey, coach. Mcdonough and Johnson have been getting an
awful lot of time with the first unit, what's going on?"
"You better believe it, I've never
seen two better freshmen players--not even you two years ago."
"You're going to start them?"
"I sure as hell am. McDonough has the sweetest outside shot on
the team, and Johnson is the quickest player I've ever coached. The kid's a demon on defense and a great ball-handler."
"But coach, Phil and Greg have
started for two years. They aren't going
to take this very well."
"Don't worry, they'll still get good
minutes. But I have to go with the best
I have, Stan--my job is always on the line.
You know that as well as anyone."
"Yeah, but I'm just not as impressed
with them as you seem to be and besides, they're a couple of pricks if you want
my opinion."
"I don't much care for them either,
to tell you the truth--too goody-two shoes for my taste, it must be that
Catholic school shit they came from.
Anyway, I have to put the best I have out there, and they are it, so I
look past all of that. I expect the same
from you. You don't have to like playing
with them, but I still expect you to blend your skills with theirs. I need you to perform at peak level."
"I can understand that, but I just
wanted to let you know how I fell."
"Good enough. Now that we know where we stand, let's play
some ball."
In spite of their love of the game,
neither John nor Willie enjoyed their first basketball season in high
school All of the other boys were
juniors and seniors and none of them had been on the football team. With just a bit of encouragement from Stan,
life on the practice court became uncomfortable. Though Coach Summers wouldn't put up with any
overt harassment, there were plenty of subtle ways for the upperclassmen to
express their displeasure with the young upstarts on the team.
John found the junior varsity games most
distressful. The coach had the varsity
players sit together as a group until they went in to dress during the third
quarter. Laurene was a junior varsity
cheerleader and the small visual exchanges and signals she shared with Stan
were something he couldn't ignore. After
each varsity game, she ran on the court to greet Stan with a hug. It may have been his imagination, but it
seemed to John that they always timed it so that he would see.
The season had scarcely begun and he
wished it were already over. The games
themselves were good. The other players
were serious enough not to play their little psychological games on John and
Willie when it came down to business.
John was the second-leading scorer behind Stan, while Willie ran the
point with confidence, using his quickness to become the leading assist man on
the team.
To fill the void left by his lack of
contact with Laurene, John began to fill his life were ever greater
activity. He spent more time with his
brothers, volunteered at the Saint Vincent De Paul Dining room to serve meals
to the homeless and focused more deeply on his studies and other reading. It only helped to a certain degree. Regardless of how tired he might be, it
always took an hour or more for him to fall asleep each night and his thoughts
were always filled with visions of Laurene.
He began to wonder if he hadn't developed
an unhealthy obsession. Endless
variations of the same fantasy played themselves out: Laurene would become his. He tried to put his situation in perspective
by thinking about the hundreds of millions of people throughout history who
were unable to share love with the person they most desired. It didn't help.
One evening, after a rare practice which
Coach Summers ended early, John and Willie stopped by a McDonald's on the way
home to have some burgers and drinks.
When they were settled, Willie started the conversation.
"I know what been going on with you
lately."
"What're you talking about?"
John asked, though he knew perfectly well what Willie was referring to.
"Laurene, of course. You are one lovesick puppy."
John considered denying the charge, but
decided it was useless. "I can't
help the way I feel about her, Willie."
Willie arched his brows. "You can't if you don't try. There are lots of girls in the world..."
"I know, and it may come down to
that. God, I'm only fourteen," John
said ruefully, shaking his head.
"Saying it is one thing, though--feeling it is another. And really, other than losing a little sleep,
thing are going all right."
"Yeah, if you mean going nonstop is
all right. You need to slow down, John,
or you're going to get one nasty case of burnout. I'm about the only one you have time to say
hello to other than your brothers. Are
you planning on making this a permanent pattern, or what?"
John nodded an affirmation. "OK, you've got a point, and I can't
disagree with it. Obviously, you're
bringing this all up for a reason, so let's hear it."
"A double-date to the Christmas
Dance. Start putting yourself in
circulation a little."
John was dubious. "Who would I ask? I've never even been on a formal date
before."
"Oh, man, anybody. There are a
thousand girls in this school who would love to go out with you."
"Really? Name one."
"You got it--for starters, the whole
varsity cheerleading squad."
"Right. Juniors and seniors, and here I am a
freshman. Good thinking, Willie."
Willie cradled his head in his hands and
moaned in mock agony. "You know
your trouble, Johnny? You can't see
yourself the way other people do.
Listen, you know I kid you a lot, but now is not the time for that stuff. What I'm telling you is the God honest
truth. In the last couple of months, I
have been approached by a lot of girls asking about you--including a couple of
the cheerleaders. You seem to have
forgotten how Lisa jumped into your lap at the party."
"So why haven't you mentioned all
this earlier?"
"Because you've been so centered on
Laurene, but now I think it's time to move on a little."
John stared off into the distance, then a
slow smile stretched over his lips. He
locked his eyes on those of his friend, and Willie grinned in turn as he sensed
something surfacing.
"Willie, I'm going to make a total
fool out of myself. Just to satisfy you,
I'm going to ask the most unapproachable girl in the school to the dance, in
front of all her friends. When I'm
totally and utterly rejected, I'll have the perfect excuse never to take that
risk again."
"You're not talking about Tara
Andrews, are you?"
"That's the one," John
confirmed.
Willie whistled. "Hey, I was talking about the varsity football cheerleaders, not
basketball."
Tara Andrews, generally considered the
most gorgeous girl in school, also had a reputation for being a rich snob who
dated only college-aged men--or older, some rumored. She carried herself regally, and John could
not remember that she had ever greeted him in any manner, not even when she was
congratulating team members after a win.
She was a sure choice for rejection.
At lunch the next day, John grabbed Willie
and guided him to the lunch area, pointing out Tara and her friends.
"I'm doing it now, before I lose my
nerve," John said.
"There's some empty seats at the
table next to them," Willie said.
"Let me get in position first.
I don't want to miss this."
Willie clapped his friend on the shoulder. "Glad I'm not in your
shoes, this could be very ugly."
"Thanks, that's just the
encouragement I needed."
John berated himself for setting up this
ridiculous effort, but steeled himself for the approach. Simple
and direct, he told himself, just get it over. Heart thumping furiously, he began to walk
leadenly toward Tara's table. For just a
moment, panic threatened to engulf him, then, just as suddenly, he knew he was
going to go through with it and he calmed considerably.
Tara was seated at the end of the table,
turned away in animated conversation with the other girls. John came and stood beside, waiting to gain
her attention, not wanting to interrupt.
Willie was staring slack-jawed at the next table, not able to believe
John was going through with it, and John shot him a quick wink. The conversation at Tara's table died as the
girls looked up at John and Tara soon turned to look in the direction of her
friends' glances, only to find John right there.
He smiled and nodded a greeting and she
seemed a bit dumbfounded. "Excuse
me, Tara. My name is John McDonough and
I hope I don't offend you by being very direct, but I was wondering if you
would like to go to the Christmas dance with me next week?" John stole a quick glance at Willie, who had
an expression of impending doom on his face.
At her table, Tara's friends looked at each in complete wonder and
bewilderment. Tara herself, normally
completely self-possessed, seemed taken aback and it took several moments for
her to absorb the content of John's request.
When she had, a sudden bewitching smile lighted her visage.
"You didn't have to introduce
yourself, John, and yes, I'd love to go to the dance with you."
John was totally befuddled. The response was completely unexpected and he
hadn't prepared for it. He stared dumbly
and noticed the other girls were starting to whisper and giggle. Tara tried to help him out.
"What time do you want to pick me
up?"
Absolute humiliation. "I'm sorry, but I don't have a license
yet." That would be the
deal-breaker.
"No problem, how about it I pick you
up about seven? You live right across
the street from Laurene, don't you?"
He was shocked that she knew anything
about him. "Yes, that's
right."
"Great. I'm looking forward to it. I'll see you on Friday."
"OK, thank you. Bye now." He walked away in a complete daze, scarcely
able to comprehend that he had just made a date with Tara Andrews.
The communication network took only
minutes to begin spreading this delicious tidbit of information around the
school. John was approached by boys he
scarcely knew congratulating him on his success with Tara. With a sinking feeling, he realized that
before long, Laurene would be getting a text with every detail of his approach
to Tara. As he mulled it over, the
thought took on a not unpleasant tone.
He had to deal with jealousy, now it might be her turn.
Willie trailed John from the cafeteria
and they managed to isolate themselves around one of the side buildings.
"That freaked me out," Willie
admitted. "I can't believe you
actually did it--and you got a date with her.
Unbelievable. So how are you
going to handle it?"
"What do you mean?"
"The date. This is an older woman, my friend, and she no
doubt has considerable experience. From
what I hear, she's twisted more than a few guys around her little finger. She might outfit you with a leash and collar
before she's done with you."
"Hey, stop trying to scare me. Besides, it's no huge thing. We'll just go to the dance, have a good time,
and that'll be it."
"Is that so? What do you think she has in mind? I mean she looked totally surprised when you
dropped the question, but it only took her a second to jump on it. Something's going on."
"What, are you paranoid or
something? Maybe she just likes
me."
Willie pursed his lips. "Could be, but something else was going
on in that head, I could see it in her eyes right when she decided to say
yes--that and a wicked little smile."
"OK, just to satisfy your curiosity,
I'll ask her when we go out."
John rose for a jump shot, which went
completely offline as a ball caromed off his head. He turned to find Stan behind him, an
unpleasant expression clouding his features.
"What's this shit I hear about you
and Tara?" he demanded.
John was peeved and let it show. "If it's any of your business, which it
isn't, we're going to the dance next Friday."
Stan snorted derisively. "She's going with you? I dated her for two years and now she's going
out with a freshman dork? That really
torques my ass, McDonough."
"She's obviously improved her
tastes." John countered.
"What the hell is that supposed to
mean, shithead? Maybe you and me should go
outside."
"Grow up, Stan. That's probably why she dumped you. Intelligent people use their minds to solve
problems, not their fists. Besides, I
never even knew she had dated you, it's not something I'm doing to get under
your skin."
"Maybe not, but it's obviously her
plan. She always was a total
bitch."
A further escalation was averted when
Coach Howard stepped into the gym and blew his referee's whistle to begin the
workout. Stan shot one last threatening
glance at John before turning his attention to the coach.
That night, John put it all
together. It was well known in the
school that Stan detested him. Tara,
always at the nucleus of gossip, would have been aware of it. A couple of friends had called him and informed
him that Tara had bitter feelings toward Stan after their breakup. What better way to get at him than by going
on a date with John?
He considered phoning Tara and calling
off the date. However, he realized that
he didn't actually mind the objective she had in agreeing to go out with
him. Also, the more he thought about it,
the more he liked the idea of making Laurene jealous, regardless of what he
told his brothers. He decided to let things carry through and see what
resulted.
Early the next day, on a rare frosty
December morning, John was lost in thought at the bus stop when his soliloquy
was interrupted by the arrival of Laurene, a more than infrequent
occurrence. He smiled at her, not
receiving the same in return.
"No ride with Stan today?"
She didn't deign to answer and the frigid
look she gave him was more than a match for the weather. John realized she had been informed of his
upcoming date with Tara and her reaction pleased him in a perverse sort of
way. Feeling a bit malicious, he decided
to press the issue.
"Are you and Stan going to the
Christmas dance next week?"
Laurene turned and stared at him so
steadily that he was forced to glance away.
"Yes, as a matter of fact, we
are. Are you bringing this up to get me
to congratulate you on your date with Tara?"
John flushed, thankful that the cold air
had already reddened his cheeks.
"No, I was just wondering."
When he glanced back at her, she was assessing him with narrowed eyes.
"You sure have changed, John
McDonough," she said in a tone guaranteed to convey the impression that
she thought it was for the worse.
"I guess we both are," John
countered uncertainly. "It's called
growing up."
Laurene rolled her eyes in disgust. "Oh, is that what going out with a
senior girl is called?"
"That's not what I meant," John
said defensively.
"Let's just drop it. This conversation is going nowhere. I should have walked to school."
"How do I look?" John asked his
mother as she cast a critical eye up and down.
"Perfect," she responded. "You look devastatingly handsome."
"I'm nervous," he
admitted. "This girl is way out of
my league. I never should have asked her
out."
"You'll be fine. Just relax and have a good time. It's just a date, not your wedding day."
"Thank God for that--uh,oh, it
sounds like she just pulled up."
John smoothed his hair and struggled to still the hammering of his
heart. The sound of the doorbell sent it
tripping even more wildly. He saw his
brothers staring down over the rails on the second story and waved them away. With a final release of a deep breath, he
walked to the door and opened it.
Tara greeted him with a radiant smile and
he stepped back and motioned. "Come
on in." John tried to sound as
casual as possible.
"Thank you, John." She strode gracefully into the room and directed
her smile at John/s mother, who was standing to the side.
"You must be Mrs. McDonough,"
Tara said, extending her hand. "I'm
so pleased to meet you."
Theresa was practically gawking. This, this woman was going out on a date with her little boy. She was dressed in a clinging white evening
dress that displayed just a bit of what seemed more than abundant
cleavage. It was a bit overwhelming and
it took her a moment to respond to Tara's greeting.
"Yes," she finally responded,
taking Tara's hand, noting the perfectly manicured nails. "It's nice you meet you as well."
John found his mother's discomfort
slightly amusing. "I guess we
should be going," he announced,
motioning Tara toward the door.
"Are you sure you don't want to
relax a bit?" Theresa asked, stalling for time while trying to digest this
disconcerting situation.
"Oh, no," John insisted. "the dance has already started and we
don't want to be too late." Even as
he said it, he closed the distance to his mother and planted a kiss on her cheek. "No need to wait up, the dance doesn't
end until midnight."
"You'll be out that late?"
Maybe a little later if we stop for
something to eat," he added, unable to resist needling her.
"Goodnight, Mrs. McDonough,"
Tara added.
As John's mother said goodbye to Tara, he
flashed her a smile, which was met with a wry smile of her own.
Outside, walking toward Tara's Car, a
late-model Mercedes, the couple looked toward each other at the same moment.
"I take it your mother's a bit
worried about us going out?"
"That's only natural, I think. This is actually the first real date I've
ever been on. She's probably more
nervous than I am."
Tara pursed her lips in amusement, and
John was surprised by a sudden desire to cover those exquisite lips with
kisses. Tara was so beautiful it made
him feel hollow with desire.
"So you're actually nervous about
tonight?"
"Absolutely. Honestly, I never expected you to accept my
invitation."
"So what made you ask?"
"My friend Willie was on me to get a
date for the dance, though I wasn't really up for it--so just to get him off my
back I told him I would ask the person I thought least likely to accept an
invitation--you."
Tara was making her first assessment of
this boy she had so impulsively agreed to date.
When they reached the car, John opened the driver's door for her without
embarrassment. As they pulled away from
the curb, Tara stole another glance at him.
He didn't look like a freshman.
John was mature physically, and carried himself like an adult.
"I have to be honest with you about
something, John. I agreed to do this
partly because I knew it would infuriate Stan and I apologize for that. I know we haven't even spoken before, and
that's my fault because of the clique I move with. I'm as susceptible to peer pressure as most
people, and my group just doesn't have much to do with freshmen boys. But I'm big on first impressions and I have
to admit I like you--you've already made me set aside some misconceptions."
That was the last sort of thing John expected
to hear from Tara and he likewise had his perceptions thrown askew.
"Thank you and I have to apologize
because I think perceptions about you have been wrong as well. Actually, I figured out that you might have
accepted because of Stan and I don't mind that at all. He's not exactly a bosom buddy. I was also kind of hoping to make someone
jealous myself, so my intentions were certainly not pure."
"You're talking about Laurene?"
"How did you know that?"
"Just the usual chatter. Weren't you dating her?"
"Not really, we were just good
friends for a long while."
"Were?"
"Yes, things have changed a lot
during the past couple of months."
"I assume because of Stan?"
John nodded glumly.
"I don't understand why she would
date a jerk like that--then again, I did it for two years. I haven't talked to her that much, but she's
such a sweet girl."
"She is, but I guess she sees Stan
differently than you do. Maybe it's just
the fact that he's older and has quite a following at school."
"All his buddies are as big of
jersks as he is. They have nothing on their minds but sports, partying, and
chasing girls. I still can't believe I
stayed with that idiot as long as I did."
"Are you dating anyone
now?" John blushed as soon as he
asked. "Sorry, that's none of my
business."
"No, I don't mind at all. I'm just better off being on my own right
now. I'm too young to get involved in a
serious relationship again, there's too much I want to do."
"I can understand that--it's what
caused the friction between Laurene and me.
She wanted to become exclusive and I just can't see the sense in forming
that kind of bond right now."
"You're being very sensible. Hey, how old are you really? You don't look or speak like any freshman
I've ever heard of. Are you sure you're
not a senior masquerading as a freshman?"
The compliment warmed John's feelings
toward Tara even more and he smile in appreciation. "I'm just who I am, there's nothing
complicated there."
Tara returned his smile and the aching
void within him expanded. "Good,
I'm glad of that. I dont' know why, but
I feel totally at ease with you and about tonight. We're going to have a good time." She reached out and squeezed his hand and the
silken touch of her skin was delicious.
The dance was already crowded and as John
and Tara made their way into the dimly lit interior of the decorated gymnasium,
more than a few heads turned their direction, then merged as gossip began. A slow song had just started and swaying couples
clung to one another on the dance floor.
Tara took his hand and guided him in that direction.
"Let's dance."
"Are you sure you don't want to wait
for a faster one?"
"No, this is nice. Besides, if they want to talk, this will give
them more to talk about."
John felt fortunate that he was
well-schooled in dancing. Gwen, apart
from her cheerleading, was a dance fanatic, and her enthusiasm had been
infectious and she had also insisted on schooling him in the art of
close-dancing. Girls in junior high had
always been impressed with his skills on the dance floor, though he had never
danced with anyone quite like Tara. When
he clasped her left and placed his right on her waist, she moved very close,
lightly making contact with her body against his. His senses were suddenly keyed to the highest
pitch. The occasional pressure of her
breasts against his chest was electrically erotic. The scent of her perfume, barely noticed
earlier, now clamored seductively for his attention. As they moved, her hair brushed lightly
against his cheek. Against his will, but
helpless to prevent it, he was becoming sexually aroused. As the song progressed, Tara pressed even closer
and John flushed as he realized she was very likely to become aware of his
excitement.
When Tara first placed her arm around
John and her hand on his back, she thought he was rigid with fear. Then she realized that though he was not
bulging with muscles, the ones he had were toned like steel cords. In his embrace, though he held her gently,
she sensed tremendous strength. He moved
her smoothly about the dance floor. She
pressed against him, enjoying the sensation of his body against hers. As John feared, her hip made direct contact
against his erection. He was instantly
mortified.
"God, I'm so sorry, he stammered,
"Maybe we should go sit down."
Tara pulled back a bit to look at him,
but he couldn't meet her eyes.
"No, it's OK, I don't mind. I'm glad you find me attractive."
Before John could react further, she
pulled her hand away from his, placed both arms around his neck, and settled in
even closer. He slid his hands around to
the small of her back and returned her embrace, giving himself over to the
moment. A fiery desire blazed in his
loins and every movement fanned it to a higher level. He shivered as he felt Tara's warm breath on
his neck.
A stiff jab in the ribs shattered the
fantasy. He turned to find Stan's
scowling face. Laurene stood behind him,
looking embarrassed.
"What the hell do you think you're
doing, McDonough."
"It's called dancing. Maybe you've heard the word, even if you
can't spell it." Tara smirked,
while Laurene shot him a dirty glance.
"Oh, you're really a smart guy,
aren't you? I'm calling your number
tonight, smartass. Let's go outside
right now."
"What is your problem, Stan? You're dating Laurene now, what do you care
that I'm with Tara?"
Stan snorted. "That slut? She's not worth having. She's a lousy lay, anyway--ask any guy in the
school."
"You bastard," Tara retorted,
"You lying bastard."
"Come on, Tara," John said,
taking her lightly by the elbow.
"Let's find a table. He's
not worth wasting time on." They
started away and Stan roughly gripped John's shoulder, starting to spin him
around. John gripped Stan's wrist, spun
in an instant, and had Stan's arm crooked behind his back in a moment, lifting
and twisting it painfully.
"Jesus, you're going to break my
goddam arm."
"We're not going to do this,
Stan. Let it be." John said, then released the older boy with a
last wrench. Stan cradled his arm to his
chest, while Laurene glared at John. He
shook his head and walked off with Tara.
As they seated themselves at a table in
the far corner of the gym, John saw that Tara had tears in her eyes.
"I'm sorry, I didn't handle that
very well, did I?"
"Yes, you did, you were great. I just shouldn't let him get to me like
that. God, I hate him, John."
"Why so much bitterness?"
Tara composed herself. "He used me, John--I was just too naive
and young to stop him. The same thing
will happen to Laurene, if it hasn't already."
A cold feeling gripped John's heart as he
considered the implications.
"You're talking sexually?"
That, and a lot more. Stan is worse than you can possibly
imagine. God, the things he made me
do..." She buried her face in her
hands and began to weep again.
John reached out and took her hands,
holding them gently. "Is it
anything you might want to talk about?
I'm a good listener and whatever you tell me won't go forward."
Tara wiped away the wetness from her
cheeks. "I, I don't know. I've never told anyone, I've been too
ashamed. You would think I'm awful."
"I promise I wouldn't. And if you haven't talked about it with
anyone before, maybe it would help you deal with it and move forward. I can see how upset you are."
She pondered his offer, finally nodding
her head. "OK, but not here. Can we leave?"
"Sure, but where should we go?"
"My parents are out of town until
Christmas Eve, let's just go over to my house."
"That sounds fine."
They were both subdued on the drive to
Tara's house. John was agonizing over
what Tara had said would happen to Laurene, while his date was caught up in her
private misery. When they arrived, Tara
led him silently into a large den and sat beside him on an ample couch. When they were settled, it became obvious to
John that she was again struggling to control her emotions, and he clasped her hand
in encouragement.
Tara cleared her throat and dabbed at
some new tears with his fingertip.
"John, I hardly know you, but I
already feel like I can trust you. You
remind me of a priest I knew before I quit going to church--Father Tim."
John's eyebrows raised. "Father Tim Adamson?" He asked.
Tara's expression brightened. "Yes, you know him, too?"
John nodded enthusiastically. "Ever since I can remember. He and my dad grew up together and were best
friends. Ever since my dad died, he and
I have been very close. He's the main
reason I think about being a priest."
A shadow passed over Tara's
expression. "I didn't know your
father died, John, how long ago was that?"
"I was only six, but I still
remember it clearly. Father Tim did the
funeral mass and was always there to support me. My mom has done a great job with raising
us."
"I'm so sorry you lost your dad, I
can't imagine how hard that was. And
your mom has done a great job--look at you and your sister. Gwennie is amazing. I can see right now that you would make a
great priest, just like Father Tim--and maybe that's why I feel so comfortable
talking with you. I really do feel like
I can trust you, John. I stopped going
to church after everything with Stan. I
just felt so guilty and hopeless. If anyone else ever heard what I'm going to
tell you, I would absolutely die."
"Then don't even concern yourself
with that. Nothing you say will go
beyond this room, you have my word on that."
Tara closed her eyes momentarily, the
furrow on her brow indicating the painful thoughts roiling within. "I guess the first thing you should know
is that I don't feel very good about myself.
Stan took away every shred of self-respect I ever had. We dated for nearly two years..not, not
dated, that's too nice of a word. He owned me for two years, John, and I
still don't know how I was able to get away from him.
He forced himself on me sexually within
the first few times we went out. Then he
just got worse, using me in just about any way you can imagine--physically and
emotionally." Her face contorted in
pain once again as some particularly horrible memories flooded her mind, and
she began to sob.
John took her hand once again. "Tara, you don't have to tell me
everything if it's that painful to remember."
"No, no, I want to, I need to tell someone. God, oh God, I still can't believe it
happened." Her shoulders were
heaving. After some moments, she
composed herself and continued.
"You know Stan and Coach Summers are close friends? One night, they got drunk together and Stan
decided they would both have sex with me.
He called me over, made me drink with them and then it happened."
She looked directly at John, her eyes
glistening. "It was horrible. They both had sex with me, John--and they
hurt me, including anal sex." She
covered her face with her hands. "I
hate them, John and hate myself even more for letting it happen."
John was stunned, not just by what Tara
had related, but by how different a person she was then he had expected. He could see in her eyes that she was
tortured by what had happened. He wanted
to do nothing more than comfort her and ease the devastating damage that had
been done to her.
"Tara, I'm so sorry," he said
softly. "The first thing I want to
say is that I'm grateful you were able to trust me with this. You never have to worry about me betraying
that." He took both of her hands in
his. "What you need to do is
forgive yourself. What happened was not
your fault. You were used by two men who
have no sense of decency. Don't let
their faults ruin your life."
Tara shook her head. "It already has. Everybody talks about how I only date older
guys now, and I've let them believe that--but I haven't dated anyone. I'm just been too filled with fear and
distrust, not to mention self-hatred."
"Maybe this will mark a moment when
you can start to move on. You will
eventually find someone you can give yourself to completely and who will
appreciate everything about you. You're
a good person, Tara Andrews, you just need to forgive yourself and start living
for the future instead of being tormented by the past."
She smiled. "What are the odds of finding a guy like
you? Pretty slim."
He laughed, pleased at the
compliment. "You attract guys of
every type. You just have to be selective
and find the right one for you. It will
happen."
"Are you sure you're not already
ordained?" she laughed. "By
the way, I am going to do one thing."
"What's that?"
"I'm going to go see Father Tim, go
to Confession, and start going to church again.
I want my life back."
"That sounds like a great idea. I always feel so unburdened after I see
him."
"John, so you have a deep faith, is
that why you think about being a priest?"
"I'm not sure about the faith
part. I have serious doubts sometimes
because there are things about it that don't make much sense--like
suffering. I think the strongest reason
I believe in God is a very human one--love.
I think we all have that deep longing for a complete, perfect love. Unless there's a God, I don't see how we
could ever fulfill that desire. Father
Tim always says that's what life is all about--the connections we make, the
love we seek and share. The rest is just
details."
"I like that--and I'm glad I
connected with you. I agreed to go out
with you for a selfish reason, for revenge.
Instead, I found a new hope, I really mean that. Can I ask you a favor?"
"Absolutely."
"I wish we had stayed at the dance
longer. It was wonderful being close to
you. Would, well, would you hold me again, just for a
while?"
John drew him into his arms, cradling her
against him. Once again, unbidden, he
found himself becoming aroused--it was almost automatic. "I'm sorry about earlier when we were
dancing...and, well it's happening again, I'm afraid I can't help it--it's
embarrassing--all these hormones kicking into action."
She only snuggled closer. "Don't be, I'm flattered you're
attracted to me. And I feel safe with
you, John--there's no one else I'd rather be with right now."
He caressed her face and hair with his
fingertips, now completely at ease.
After a long while, she finally pulled away. "How about something to eat and
drink?" she asked.
They put together a snack, then continued
talking for several hours about every aspect of their lives. When she finally dropped John off after
midnight, he felt as though he'd known her for ages. As they stopped in front of the house, he
wondered how he should say good-bye, but Tara took care of that for him. She took his chin into one hand and guided
her lips to his, kissing him gently and warmly.
"Good night, John. Thank you so much for everything."
He was glowing and waved awkwardly as he
stepped from the vehicle. He stood and
watched down the street even after she was gone, then glanced over to Laurene's
house. There was no sign of any
movement.
John ran into Willie the next morning
after mass.
"Man, you left the dance early, how
did things go?"
"Good," John replied. "We went back to Tara's house."
Willie's eyebrows raised in surprise, forming
a question.
"No, nothing like that
happened," John asserted quickly.
"She wanted to talk after the incident with Stan, so that's what we
did the rest of the night."
"Talk is good. What's the story?"
"I can only tell you that I
completely misjudged her, Willie. Tara
Andrews is a great person and I've made
a new friend. There's something else I
have to tell you."
"What's that?"
"I'm quitting the basketball
team."
"Are you kidding me?--why?"
"Willie, you are my closest friend
in this world, but I made a promise to keep certain things confidential. I can only tell you this: If you knew what I found out, you would quit
as well. I won't play for Coach Summers,
not now, not ever again."
Willie considered this for some moments.
"Then let's go see Coach Summers
first thing tomorrow morning. If you
can't play for him, neither can I. I
will always have your back."
John was warmed by his friend's
response. "You're doing the right
thing, I promise you, even though we're probably going to catch hell for doing
it." They clasped hands, their bond
strengthened.
Before school the next morning, the boys
went to Coach Summers office and knocked on the door.
"Enter!" the command came.
The boys opened the door and walked in
front of the coach's desk, standing stiffly and nervously.
"So what's going on?" the coach
asked.
"We're leaving the team,"
Willie announced evenly.
Coach Summers frowned and he leaned back
in his chair and regarded them coldly for long moments.
"So what brought this on? Anything I can say to change your minds? You're both having good years."
"It's personal," Willie
replied. "And we won't change our
minds."
"What have you got to say,
McDonough? Are you going to let Willie
do all the talking for you?"
John swallowed. "I'll have something more to say when
Willie leaves, but it's private."
"OK, then get the fuck out, Willie,
unless you have something more..."
Willie shook his head then patted John on
the shoulder as he made his exit.
When they were alone, the coach looked at
him with contempt.
"I have no respect for
quitters."
"And I have no respect for
criminals," John countered quietly.
"I know everything you and Stan did to Tara Andrews and I'll never
play for you again. I wish she had contacted
the police."
Summers turned ashen and looked as though
he'd been punched. Then he regained his
composure and his eyes narrowed to slits as he leaned forward.
"That fucking whore is nothing but a
goddam liar, and if you choose to listen to her stories, that's your
problem. Now get the hell out of here, I
have nothing more to say."
He and Willie at lunch with Tara and
Marie that afternoon. When they were
nearly done with their meal, a contingent of the varsity basketball players,
including Stan, approached the table.
Surrounded by his friends, Stan was nearly swaggering. "What’s this about you leaving the
team?" He eyed Tara, who coolly
ignored him.
"Very simple, Stan. We quit, that's all there is to it."
"Not quite, dickhead. Coach Summers wants you turn in your
equipment this afternoon." An evil
grin twisted his lips. “We'll all be
there to say goodbye."
The inference was unmistakable. With Coach Reed's approval, no doubt, they
planned to teach the boys a "lesson."
Hot anger flooded through John, rising to a volcanic pitch in just an
instant. Before he even realized what he
was doing, he flung himself over the table, knocked Stan to the ground and began
to pound him heavily to the face. Stan's
friends began to rain blows and kicks down on John, but he ignored them and
continued to beat Stan in a white-hot rage.
Willie joined the fray, pulling the other boys back. Within a few seconds, some of the other
football players ran over, holding everyone back.
Willie intervened with John, pulling him
off the dazed and bloodied Stan.
"That's enough, man, it's over." Just as suddenly as the anger had overtaken
him, John felt drained. Several teachers
had arrived on the scene.
"All right, who started this?"
Mr. Jamieson, the Geology teacher demanded.
John raised his hand. "I did, it was my fault."
Jamieson took a look at Stan's face and
was aghast. "Someone get him to the
nurse's office. Mr. McDonough, you come
with me right now."
"I don't understand, John, this
isn't like you at all."
"I prefer not to explain anything, I
accept full responsibility. I'll accept
any punishment you see fit to give."
Mr. Fischer rubbed his chin in
puzzlement. "But I know there must
be some reason behind this and it's a serious offense. From what I've been told, you beat Stan
rather severely."
"I'm sorry, I'm afraid I lost
control. I have no excuses and I can
only say it won't happen again."
"I'm sure it won't. Still, I can't just dismiss this and forget
it, I have no choice but to suspend you for two weeks after school starts
again."
John nodded, not overly surprised at the
judgment. "I'll miss semester
exams." he noted.
"I know that. If they are willing, your teachers can make
other arrangements for you--perhaps they'll give you make-up tests on your
return. In the meantime, you can have
friends bring you assignments.
John nodded. "Is that all, Mr. Fischer?"
The principal sighed. "Yes, you may go."
When he left Fischer's office, John was surprised to see
Stan sitting in the outer office, his face swollen and bandaged. John approached and the boy cowered as John
pointed a finger at him.
"Don't ever fuck with me
again," John said quietly, then departed.
Facing his mother, Gwen, and his brothers
was the hardest task, but even that didn't turn out to be as difficult as he
had expected. Somehow, his mother seemed
to sense that whatever had caused him to erupt in such anger had been severe. There was no lecture and she merely hugged
him when he came in the house, though her eyes were filled with concern. The twins were quiet in front of Theresa and
Gwen, but when they found themselves alone in their room later, John could see
they were bursting with excitement.
"Tell us all about it, " Curtis
jumped in. "We heard you totally
kicked Stan's ass."
"Yeah, yeah!" Chris chimed in. "They said you took him down and were
pounding his face bloody!"
"Guys! There's nothing cool about it." John snapped back immediately. "I'm in big trouble now, I'll be missing
school until the new semester, and it didn't solve a thing. I let my anger get the best of me and I lost
control. Stan might be a jerk, but
nobody deserves that, so stop thinking it's something great."
The boys quieted, but John could tell by
their exchange of glances that they still thought it was a great
achievement. He decided not to pursue
the topic and flipped on the television.
John essentially spent the two weeks of
his suspension and the entire Christmas break in hibernation, seeing only
Willie to get his class assignments.
When January finally crawled around, he found himself anxious to return
to school. He had missed it, even though
it would no longer include basketball.
Since he and Willie had left the team, they had lost five straight
games, including finishing last in a Christmas tournament with two losses. Evidently Stan had missed the first three
games due to the injuries John had inflicted.
When he opened his locker, it took him a
few moments to remember his combination.
As he fumbled with it came a determination to make the second semester a
new start in every way. As he pulled
books out for his first class, a movement in the far corner of his eye caught
his attention. Glancing up, he saw
Laurene standing at a turn in the hallway, staring at him. In the mere fraction of a moment that their
eyes met, his world was shattered. As
she abruptly spun away, a sick feeling swept away his good mood. There was no doubt in his mind--Laurene had
slept with Stan.
He stood dumbfounded, trying to convince
himself otherwise. Yet the look he had
caught was unmistakable, he had read guilt and what almost might have been a
plea for help. He wanted to be sick and
fell back against his locker, closing his eyes.
"Hey, John, welcome back."
His mounting misery was briefly
interrupted by this greeting from a football teammate.
"Hey, Frankie," John replied,
surprising himself by the steadiness of his voice. As the boy passed, John, goaded by his
conflicting emotions, suddenly bolted in the direction Laurene had gone. She had joined a group of girls further down
the hall, but that didn't stop John from approaching. He came up from behind and plucked lightly at
her elbow. When she turned and
recognized him, her eyes glinted with ice.
"Laurene, could I please talk with
you?" he asked directly, undeterred by her demeanor.
"Why would you think I would want to
talk with you?" she countered coldly.
He felt no anger, only sorrow. "It might be good for both of us,"
he said simply.
There it was, he could see it again. She had softened, and the pain she was
feeling reflected in her eyes. Then her
visage hardened once again.
"Look, just stay out of my
life," she said, turning her back and marching away deliberately. A couple of girls tittered over the slight
and exchanged whispers. John ignored
them and headed for his first class in a fog of helplessness. A fierce longing for Laurene tore at his
heart even as he realized she would never again give him a chance. Hope dissolved into near despair.
"You're sure about this?" Theresa asked.
"Sure, it'll be good for me. I'll come back in time for the start of
football practice in August." He
tried to sound cheerful about it, but in reality he felt as though he were putting
himself into exile. John had accepted
his Uncle Jason's offer to come to his ranch in South Dakota for the summer.
"It will be a lot of hard
work," she cautioned. "Jason
lives to work, it's his only real passion."
"I know that, but I will learn a lot."
His mother pulled him close and squeezed
tight. "This doesn't have something
to do with Laurene, does it?"
John thought about denying it, but saw no
point in trying to deceive her, she already knew the truth.
"Of course it does. I don't feel much like looking outside and
seeing her with Stan all summer."
Theresa sighed. "You're too young to be so lovesick,
John. Besides, this relationship with
stan may not last and you could very well have the chance to mend things with
Laurene."
You
don't know how serious it is between them, he thought--he'll never let her go.
Aloud, he replied, "Maybe, but I'm not going to count on it."
As he
stepped off the plane, a thousand memories were triggered by the moist, earthy
odors of the South Dakota prairie. The
mixture of freshly cut hay and cattle dung took him back to the many visit his
family had made here, though he had never arrived by plane. As he entered the small terminal, it took
just a second to spot the burly Uncle Jason and his family—Laura, his wife, a
dour woman who always appeared to be somewhat indisposed, and the cheerful
faces of the blonde twins Bruce and Barb, who were two years John’s
juniors. Also there was Don, four years
older than John, but with whom he had always felt the greatest kinship. As they greeted him warmly, he realized he
had made the best decision. An isolated,
idyllic summer in the country was just what he needed. He couldn’t have been more wrong. The following day, still tired from his trip,
he was startled from his deep sleep by a sharp pain. He jerked spasmodically and opened his
eyes. His uncle’s face focused slowly
into view, a smile on his lips.
“Time to get up, John,” he
announced. “The day ain’t gonna wait on
us.”
The source of the pain became localized
as his uncle gave John’s sideburn another tug, and he helped in pain, drawing
giggle from Don and Bruce, who slept in the same room.
“Welcome to South Dakota, “ Don
said. “That’s just one of Dad’s ways of
getting us up. You just better hope he
doesn’t decide to do it by giving you one of his back rubs—it takes the skin
right off your hide!”
John made a motion as if to spin John on
his belly and begin the procedure to which Don had just referred, but John
jumped quickly out of bed on the opposite side.
“OK, OK, I’m up,” he protested.
John had never been a big eater at
breakfast, but he couldn’t refuse the food his aunt placed in front of him as
they all sat down at the kitchen table.
Mound of scrambled eggs and hashed browns were piled on his plate, along
with several pieces of bacon, sausage and slices of toast, all to be washed
down with huge cup of milk. His first
sip of the milk produced an unpleasant surprise. Clots of cream floated on the surface, and it
had a raw, grassy taste that was
completely unlike the milk he was used to drinking.
“Now that’s real milk, John,” his uncle
informed him. “Pasteurized only to kill
any bacteria, but other than that, fresh from the cow. Not like that water you’re used to drinking,
is it?”
“No, it’s not,” John replied, fighting an
urge to gag. Out of nowhere, he was
suddenly homesick, and he hadn’t even spent a full day in South Dakota. By 6:30, they were headed out to work, John
wasn’t sure what was planned for the day.
“Hey, Dan, what’re we doing today, anyway?”
he asked as they jumped in the back of a blue Chevrolet pickup truck, while the
twins got into the cab with their father.
“I thought you knew. We rounded up the cattle over the last week
or so from the winter pastures, and now it’s time to brand the calves.”
John was not overjoyed at such a
prospect. “Doesn’t that hurt them a
lot?” he asked as casually as he could.
“Nah, they’ve got thick hides. They don’t like it, of course, but it’s not
too bad. I think the ear-notching and
emasculation probably hurts them more.”
“I don’t know what those are.”
“Ear-notching is another way of
identifying the cattle. While we’re
taking care of the big stuff, Brenda will give injections and use the
ear-notchers, which are sort of like a pair of pliers designed to snip out
sections of flesh from the calf’s ear.
Dad does the branding and emasculation.
The emasculators look like bolt cutters, except the blades don’t close
together all the way. They pinch off the
tubes that lead from the testicles without cutting into the scrotum. If it’s done right, it’s safer than
castration, and a lot less bloody.”
It all sounded unpleasant to John, and
his foreboding was more than justified.
When they arrived at the branding corral, preparations began. While Jason set up the branding equipment
with the help of the twins, Don and John drove several hundred head of cattle
into the corral from a small pasture, then separated the calves from their
mothers, who were put back into the pasture.
After an explanation to John as to his
role in the procedure, they went to work.
Don grabbed the back leg of the first victim, then John grabbed its
tail. Pulling in opposite directions,
they flipped it to its side. John
quickly jumped on the calf’s side, pinning it down and firmly holding and
crooking the upper leg while Don stretched the animal out by sitting on the
ground, bracing his foot against the animal’s rear end, and pulling the upper
foot out as tightly as he could, immobilizing the animal and preventing it from
gaining any leverage to get up.
Barb then raced up with the ear-notchers,
positioned them and ripped a chunk of flesh from the beast’s ear, eliciting a
bellow of pain along with a flow of blood.
She followed with an injection where she deftly lifted the flesh above the
shoulder, inserted the needle, and quickly made the inoculation. She then hurried to apply a paste to any
budding horns which would prevent their growth.
By this time, Bruce had pulled the first iron out of the propane flame
in which it was being heated. John could
feel the heat radiate from the red-hot metal as Bruce handed it to his
father. Jason placed a heavy boot on the
animal’s flank, then pressed the iron into the hide. The fur sizzled and appeared to break into
flame and John’s first whiff of the horrible scent would be fixed forever in
his memory.
The fur seemed to melt away, quickly
followed by the sizzle of burning flesh.
The calf stiffened momentarily, stunned by the sudden pain, then
struggled violently, bellowing pitifully.
Jason held the iron firmly in place, rocking the handle back and forth
to ensure a deep, even brand. To John,
it seemed like he held it there forever.
When he finally removed the iron, a charred, bloody patch was
revealed. John found the efficient
brutality shocking. With the procedure
complete, they released their hold on the calf and Jason kicked it lightly with
his boot tip.
“All right, let’s move it,” he
urged. The calf staggered uncertainly to
its feet, tongue lolling, then lurched back toward the herd. John felt a surge of pity for the poor
creature.
His sympathy was short-lived. The operation was endlessly repeated and by
the time they were halfway through the day, John was exhausted. His forearms were cramping from the strain of
holding the struggling calves and his senses were overwhelmed by the stench of
burning hide and the sight of bloodied flesh.
He soon found he no longer cred for the suffering the animals were
enduring, he simply wanted the day to end.
That first day was a fitting introduction
to the rigors the summer held in store.
Branding lasted several more days, then the harvesting of the hay began,
a process that involved the cutting, raking and stacking of seemingly endless
fields of alfalfa and wild grasses.
Those weeks were followed by work on miles of fencing that needed
repair, while August brought in the harvest of a massive oat crop. Each day began at sunrise and continued to
the summer nightfall. Lunch, and often
dinner, was eaten in the fields.
“So what do you think?” Don asked late
one night as they settled into bed.
Their nightly conversations were a ritual that provided one of the few
diversions from their endless work days.
“Think about what?” John countered.
“Well, you’re heading home in a couple of
days. I’m just wondering how you feel
about the way the summer went.”
John shrugged. “I’m not sure. I mean, it’s been great being with you guys,
but I don’t think I have it in my blood to be a rancher.”
“Who says I do?”
“But you’ve grown up out here. It’s what you know best.”
“Well there’s a lot more to this world
than being isolated from society and busting your ass year-round.”
“Yeah, like getting some pussy now and
then,” the precocious and outrageous Bruce volunteered.
Don responded by hurling a pillow at his
brother’s head. “Watch your language,
smartass,” he warned. “But basically,
he’s right. If it weren’t for school,
I’d never meet any girls. And as far as
dating, other than the prom or something special, there’s no way to just stop
by someone’s house or go out for a soda or something. Don’t you miss being around girls? You must have had plenty interested in you,
what with being a football player and all.”
“Not really. There’s only one girl I like, but she’s going
out with someone else. Besides, she
thinks I’m a jerk anyway.”
“How’s that?”
“We were good friends for a long time,
but when we got into high school she suddenly wanted to get serious and go
steady, but I kind of backed away from that.
So she started dating this guy in the junior class and we haven’t spoken
much since then.”
“Hell hath no fury like that of a woman
scorned,” Bruce quoted.
“Where did you learn that?” John asked,
breaking into laughter.
“In some book I was reading. Women are just bad news. That’s why I play the field, I don’t wanna
tie myself down.”
“Right!” Don replied sarcastically. “The only sex you’re ever going to have is with
a sheep in the barn, and even then you’ll probably have to pay for it.” John and Don both guffawed at the crude joke,
and Bruce started to wrestle with his older brother.
Chapter 4
Time away is often an impetus for involvement, not separation.
John
started as he was grabbed from behind and squeezed in a vicious hug.
“Thanks
for writing, asshole! Good to have you
back.”
Willie
released his friend and they faced one another with broad smiles.
“It’s
good to be back, Willie. Jesus, you’ve
put on weight, you look like a power-lifter!”
“Been
pumping the iron, brother. Looks like
you ate well and worked out, too. Ready
for some football?”
“Without
a doubt. I’ve had enough of farm life
for a year.”
Even as
they were talking, John’s eyes started roaming the hallway and Willie zeroed in
on this activity, and then slapped John lightly on the top of the head.
“You’ve
got to do something about that this year, boy.”
John did
his best to feign perplexity. “What are
you talking about?”
“Don’t
give me that. We both know who you’re
looking for.”
“Is it
that obvious?”
“Maybe
only to me, but I know you too well. And
no doubt you’ve been stewing about this all summer. Am I right, or what?”
“Yeah,
dammit, you are.”
“Then do
something about it. Compete!”
“She’s
still going out with Stan?”
“As far
as I know. I saw them together a few
times. Willie paused, then finally spoke
again. “Johnny, that dude is bad news
for her, if you know what I mean.” He
exchanged a look with his friend that conveyed far more than the few words he
had spoken.
“I know
exactly what you’re talking about, Willie.
The guy is not only a complete manipulator, he’s dangerous, too.”
“Then do
something about it, not just for your sake, but especially for hers.”
The
encouragement filled John with a new resolve.
“I’ll give it my best shot, believe me.”
John’s
first period class was in sophomore English.
He arrived early and took a seat near the back of the class, anxiously
scanning the stream of students coming into the room. Just before the second bell sounded to signal
the start of the class hour, Laurene entered with Katie Simms and they took
seats on the opposite side of the classroom.
John fought back a wave of nervous adrenaline and marveled at Laurene’s
beauty. She was swiftly making the
transition into womanhood and he felt inadequate and intimidated.
The bell
rang and the small pockets of conversation died as everyone noticed that the
teacher was waiting on them for their full attention.
“Good
morning,” he began when everyone was silent.
“For those of you who don’t know me, I am Mr. Foster. Welcome to sophomore English. I will begin by promising two things: First, your work here will not be easy. Second, if you devote yourself, I guarantee
it will be both interesting and rewarding.”
His gravelly voice commanded attention, and John quickly sized up the
lanky, fortyish man with thinning hair and piercing eyes as someone to respect.
“Now that
you know me, I would like for each of you to introduce yourselves, beginning
with this first row. Please stand, state
your name, and then give us one, and only one sentence about your summer. Please begin.”
Carlotta
Anders stood uncertainly and fidgeted as she tried to figure out which
direction to face, then blurted out the required information. “Hi, my name is Carlotta Anders. I played a lot of tennis this summer.”
Mr.
Foster nodded his approval and the process continued down the first row which
included Laurene. When her turn came,
she came gracefully to her feet, showing no signs of self-consciousness. She smiled directly at Mr. Foster. “Hello, my name is Laurene Wilson. I spent the summer falling in love.” The revelation provoked a chorus of hoots
and catcalls and drew a thin smile from Mr. Foster. John gritted his teeth and flushed, aware a
few eyes had turned his direction.
He lost
track of the litany of introductions that followed, consumed by jealousy and
darker thoughts. When his turn arrived,
he stood, knowing that Laurene was now aware of his presence, if she hadn’t
been before.
“Good
morning, my name is John Patrick McDonough.
I spent a lonely summer working on my uncle’s ranch in South
Dakota.” He swept his glance over the
class as he spoke, ending the sentence with his attention firmly focused on
Laurene. She averted her eyes.
Mr.
Foster, all business, began his first lecture.
John, always an excellent student, took appropriate notes, but also
found time to study Laurene from across the room. It didn’t take long before she noted his
attention, which she studiously pretended to ignore. For a long while, she kept her eyes focused
strictly on the paper in front of her, but when she tried to steal a glance
John’s direction, it was only to find he was already looking at her. He flashed her his friendliest smile and she flushed and
turned away in bewilderment.
When
class ended, she rose to leave very quickly, only to find that John had timed
his departure so they would meet near the classroom entrance. By now, she was thoroughly flustered and her
nervousness was quite evident to John, who found himself enjoying her discomfiture. Laurene continued to try and ignore him as
she passed in front of him into the hallway, but he wouldn’t let her be. He strode briskly behind her, and then leaned
forward to speak into her ear.
“Hello,
Laurene,” he said. “It’s nice to see you
again. You look great.”
She
turned, a frown clouding her features.
“Hi, John,” she said uncertainly.
“What’s going on?”
He
shrugged. “I just thought we could start
this year out right. I’m hoping we can
be friends again.”
She
struggled to find words, surprised at his directness. “I, I don’t think that would be a good
idea. I mean, I wouldn’t mind,
but…” She left the thought unfinished. Before John could formulate a response, Stan
Lawton arrived to escort Laurene to her next class. He shot both of them a dirty glance and John
could plainly see that Laurene was scared.
“What the
hell’s going on here?” Stan demanded, throwing a rough arm around Laurene.
“Just
saying hello to an old friend,” John replied calmly.
“Oh,
yeah? Well go say hello to another old
friend, because this one is spoken for.”
He led Laurene away without giving John a chance to reply.
“I don’t
want you around him, he just wants to cause problems between us.”
“He lives
right across the street, he’s my neighbor.”
“So
what? That doesn’t mean you’ve got to
have anything to do with him.”
“We were
friends for a long time,” she ventured.
Now Stan
was really angry. “That’s right-WERE,
and don’t forget it. What are you, still
hot for him or something? You just say
the word and I’m outta here. But you
just remember no one else will love you the way I do. Besides, how do you think he would react if I
were to tell him how close we’ve become in the past few months?” He emphasized the word “close” with a leering
expression to let her know exactly what he was talking about.
Laurene
flushed deeply, humiliated at the prospect that John would ever be told she had
been having sex with Stan.
“No, I
don’t want him to know that. I’ll stay
away from him.”
Stan
softened, a winning smile lighting his face.
“That’s my girl. Look, I just
love you so much, I don’t think I could ever stand to be without you.” He leaned over and kissed her, his hand
already running up her side toward her breasts, a certain prelude to sex.
Laurene
caught his hand and held it. “Wait, Stan,”
she pleaded, “Please, I don’t feel good about this.”
“Don’t
you love me?”
“Yes, of
course I do, but I just don’t think we should keep doing this.”
“Look,”
he said earnestly, taking her face gently in his hands. “I love you and someday we’re going to be
married. There’s nothing wrong with what
we’re doing, it’s part of what love is all about. A man needs this kind of release with the
woman he loves, or the relationship just doesn’t work out. You do want things to work out for us, don’t
you?”
She
nodded and he immediately resumed kissing her and she found herself helpless to
avert the sex that followed. As Stan
entered her an image of John McDonough shaking his head in disgust filled her
mind. As Stan climaxed, Laurene moaned,
but not in pleasure. She was
weeping. Stan rolled off her, oblivious to her emotions.
“God,
that was great,” he sighed.
John’s
sophomore year was one of both triumph and heartache. He and Willie once again led their football
team to the state title, but the momentary thrill of winning seemed hollow to
John. It was just a game, and everyone
made too much of it. Laurene had ignored
him entirely, it led to an underlying emptiness that plagued John and dulled
every other interest.
As May
came to a close, he sat with Willie after school at their favorite pizza place.
“So
you’re headed back to South Dakota again this summer?” Willie asked, after telling John about his
family’s plans to head down south for a month.
“I guess
so. It’s better than hanging around here
all summer, especially with you being gone for that long.”
“Still
hung up on Laurene, aren’t you?”
John
shook his head and sighed. “Yeah,
unfortunately. I think about her all the
time, Willie. She hasn’t talked to me
all year, but just looking at her I realize she’s not very happy.”
“Why does
she keep dating that asshole?”
“I don’t
know, momentum, I guess. And along with
the fact that she’s afraid of him is the whole sex thing.”
“You’re
sure she’s sleeping with him?”
“Oh,
yeah, I knew it right after it happened just by looking in her eyes. Then during football season, I was rooming
with Don Jamieson one night. He knows
Stan and they got drunk together one night and Stan started bragging about
having sex with Laurene. He told me that
Stan said something like, ‘Yeah, I fuck the bitch all the time.’ He’s a total asshole, but Laurene is just too
caught up in everything to see it.”
“So tell
me something,” Willie said. “Why are you
so crazy in love with her still?”
“Because
she’s the one, Willie, just like Marie has been for you. If I think about the future, it has her in
it. I mean, this year has been
miserable, but I can’t give up hope. I’m
sure she knows how I feel about her, and sooner or later, my patience is going
to pay off—I hope.”
“Me, too,
man, it’s no fun watching you go through this.
What about Tara, has she been in touch?”
“Just a
couple of letters. She’s going to school
back east and it seems like she’s doing great.
I have a strong feeling it’s a friendship that will go on hiatus, we’re
living two very different lives.”
“And
you’re not looking for anyone else?”
“Nope, no
desire at all. I’m waiting for Laurene.”
“I hear
you.”
John’s
second summer in South Dakota was nearly a duplicate of the first, with one
exception. With his previous experience
now under his belt, his Uncle Jason expected even more out of the youngster,
and he got it. John pushed himself as
hard as he could, anxious to please his uncle.
Still,
there was plenty of time to think. Much
of the work was mechanical and routine and John’s mind would fill with thoughts
of Laurene. Driving tractors for hours up and down
hayfields, John would daydream that Laurene would suddenly appear on one of the
country roads nearby, anxious to open up and share her very soul with him. Scene after scene of some breakthrough with
her kept playing out and he gave himself to them completely, refusing to
abandon hope.
As August
drew to a close, John became nearly frantic to return to Arizona, even though
the previous months had brought him closer than ever to his uncle’s family, and
especially with Don. But that was just
it—they were family, that was a given.
They would always be there, but Laurene might not be. He had to get back.
“Man, I
feel terrible,” Willie said. “I didn’t
get one letter off to you this summer, and you wrote three.”
“I guess
that makes us even for last year.
Willie, you’re my closest friend, and three months apart can’t change that. That’s what good friends can do—take each
other for granted.”
“You’re
right about that. Hey, are you psyched
up for the season?”
Willie
was referring to football, of course, and John shrugged. “To be honest, I’ve hardly given it a
thought. Hell, where do we go from
here? We’ve won two state titles in a
row, what’s a third really going to mean?”
“This is
money time, though, baby! The colleges
are going to be looking at us under a microscope and the recruitment letters
are already flooding in.”
“I guess
so. I’m not worried about it. As long as I have you to throw to, we’re
guaranteed a great season.”
Willie
laughed. “Thanks, buddy, but we know
that only part of it. I played with a
lot of guys this summer, including some QBs from other schools. Nobody, and I mean nobody has your arm or your
presence. All I have to do is
concentrate on running my pattern and catching the ball, because I know you’re
always going to get it there.”
“And all
I have to do is concentrate on getting it near you, because if I do, I know
it’s a catch, so I guess that makes us even.”
“Let’s go
for it,” Willie said, as they clasped hands.
“Hi, how
was your summer?” Laurene asked.
“Not bad,
a lot of hard work, but it’s good to be back.”
John stared at Laurene. What was
happening? Every year she became more
beautiful and his heart was bursting with emotion. What was he to do?
She noted
his intense gaze, obviously aware of what he was feeling, but dared not
acknowledge it. “Well, I hope you have a
great year,” she said simply. “I’ll see
you later.”
That was
the most in-depth conversation John had with Laurene all year. As expected, John and Willie led the Mustangs
to their third consecutive championship.
For John it was a completely hollow achievement. When the season ended, the little distraction
it provided from his feeling for Laurene were gone, and he sank into misery.
While she
greeted him regularly, she simply didn’t talk to him. John was crushed to discover they did not
share a single class in common, so he saw far less of her than their first two
years of high school. Laurene invariably
ate lunch with her cheerleader friends and John only caught flimpses of her as
she practiced after school. Once
football season ended, he only saw her coming and going from her house—usually
with Stan.
They were
still dating, as he had both known and feared they would be. There was nothing to give him any hope—until
Linda. Linda Wilson was Laurene younger
sister. John had always been friendly
with her, but because of their age difference, they had never become close
friends. She was two years younger than
John and a freshman.
The week
after football season ended, and the excitement over the championship had died
down, John was in the library seated at a table doing some research for a class
project. He was poring over a book when
someone sat down beside him. For a
heart-stopping moment, he thought it was Laurene, but he turned to find it was
Linda. She flashed him a broad smile
that resembled her sister’s in every way.
“Hi,
John, how’s life?”
He
nodded. “Not bad, I’m getting
along. How is high school so far?”
“I’m
having a lot of fun—but my sister isn’t.”
That
instantly caught his attention. “How is
that, Linda?”
“You
know, the whole relationship with Stan.
I just don’t understand why she’s still with him.”
John made
a wry face. “I’ve been wondering that
myself for almost the last two years.”
“You
really do like her a lot, don’t you?”
“That’s
not much of a secret.”
“Well,
don’t give up. She still talks about you
a lot, you know.”
John felt
a sudden surge of hope. “She does?”
“Yes. In fact, I sometimes think that the only
thing that keeps her with Stan is the fact that she doesn’t feel very good
about herself, and he just reinforces that.”
“I’ve
tried to be friends with her, but it just hasn’t worked out.”
“I
know—because of him. Don’t give up,
though. I’m behind you 100%.”
“Thanks,
Linda.”
For the
rest of the year, Linda became John’s confidant and sole link to Laurene. They spoke and texted frequently, but did not
see each other that much at school, primarily because their schedules were very
different. Apart from the fact that she
kept informed about the happenings in Laurene’s life, he found she was a good
friend in her own right. She shared many
of her sister’s qualities and actually seemed more mature than Laurene had been
at the same age. She definitely was
wiser about men, and though she attracted a good deal of attention from
upperclassmen, she refused to date anyone except as part of a group.
Yet
overall, John labeled his time as a junior, “The Year of Desolation.” His contact with Linda only heightened his
love and desire for Laurene. When May
arrived, it was almost with a sense of desperation that he faced the prospect
of going back to South Dakota without having made any progress in renewing a
relationship with Laurene. The heartache
of seeing her but not being able to interact with her was more than he bear, so
he decided to make at least one more attempt before the year was over.
It was
well after midnight when John crossed the street, fighting a feeling that
verged on terror. He walked up to
Laurene’s bedroom window and tapped lightly.
She drew back the curtains and opened the window.
“Hi,
Laurene, I haven’t been able to sleep.”
“What’s
wrong?”
“This
whole year—actually the past two years.
Laurene, we were such close friends—and maybe even more, but we haven’t
said more than hello all year. Honestly,
it’s been tearing me apart.”
Her face
softened and a deep sadness reflected in her eyes. She drew a deep breath. “I know, and I’m so sorry. John, I haven’t meant to hurt you, but Stan is
just so jealous and he still has friends at school that tell him about
everything I do.”
“Laurene,
are you going to marry Stan?” He wasn’t
sure what prompted him to ask such a blunt question, but it felt as though his
entire future balanced on it.
Her eyes
dropped, she couldn’t meet his intense gaze.
“I think so, John. We’ve talked a
lot about it, and he wants to get married as soon as I graduate next year.”
“What do
you want?”
“The
same, I suppose. We’ve been together
almost three years now.”
John was
devastated and there was a long, awkward silence.
“I, I’d
better get back in now. I just wanted to
say hello before I left for South Dakota again.
I hope you have a great summer.”
“You,
too, John.” She said softly, her eyes
welling with tears as he watched him trudge back across the street.
“mom, I
just can’t face another year like this one and Uncle Jason says it will be fine
with him.”
“If you
really have your mind set on this, I won’t try to change it. I just
want you to be sure.”
“I’m
sure.”
“OK, I’ll
call and let him know. You’d better talk
to your brothers, they’re going to be upset, you know.”
When
school ended on May 23rd,
Laurene went to work at a daycare center where she had been on the staff
the previous two summers. When her first
shift ended that afternoon, she opened her car and found an envelope had been
slipped in through the window she left slightly open for ventilation. It was from John.
Dear
Laurene,
This has
been such a terrible year for me that I decided I didn’t want to face another
one like it. You know how I feel about
you, I have loved you since the moment we first met, but there’s just too much
pain involved in being around you and yet having so little contact.
By the
time you read this letter, I will be back in South Dakota, only this time I
will be staying for the entire year. I
can’t even begin to express how much I will miss you—but probably no more than
I have for the last couple of years I
hope you have a great senior year. I’ve
accepted a scholarship offer to play at Arizona State, so I’ll be back in the
area, maybe I will see you then.
Love
Always,
John
Laurene
read the note several times, unable to believe it. When the full implications sank in, she
slumped over the steering wheel and wept bitterly.
John
could not get over how cold it was on the tenth of June.
The weather in Phoenix had been over 100 degrees when he left, while the
temperature in South Dakota barely crept into the 60s. The wind was howling, and sheets of rain
drenched the earth. He and his cousins
and uncle spent the day in a alrge barn near the house repairing and
maintaining equipment. John had been at
the ranch for a couple of week and the branding had been completed. They were waiting for it to dry out to begin
harvesting hay.
Unlike
the previous summers, when the beds had been set up in the bedrooms upstairs,
all the kids were now in the partially finished basement. Brenda slept on one side of a thin partition,
while the three boys had beds in the other half of the basement. Around 11 that night, the boys crawled into
bed after a late-night snack. Don
switched on the radio to their favorite local station as they normally fell
asleep to the sound of music playing.
There was none this night.
“…we’ve
been informed by city officials that several crews are working to clear debris
from the spillway. Nevertheless, the
situation is considered serious and all citizens who live below Canyon Lake Dam
along the Course of Rapid Creek are advised to evacuate their homes. Several emergency shelters are being set up
and as additional reports become available, we will pass information along to
our listeners.”
The boys
weren’t worried in the least, despite the fact that rain continued unabated
outside. Rapid City and Canyon Lake Dam
were more than 15 miles distant. A small
creek did run to within several hundred yards of the house, but it was dry most
summers. They started to joke about the
situation.
“Hey, if
the dam does give way, at least it’ll flush the trash out of the park,” Don
started.
“Yeah,
and the drunks along with it,” John added, not even knowing if any transients
stayed in the park.
“You guys
are sick,” Brenda’s voice floated over the partition.
“Aw, shut
your yap,” Bruce retorted with the typical courtesy he reserved for his twin
sister. “Nobody asked your opinion.”
“Really? Well you’d be sorry if that dam broke and
people were killed.”
“Only if
you weren’t one of them,” Bruce responded, eliciting snickers from Don and
John. Brenda did not deign to respond to
the insult, and the conversation died as everyone drifted off to sleep.
As usual,
John didn’t doze off for quite some time.
He always took a half hour or more to think before falling asleep. He found this time of night be calm and
peaceful and it allowed him to ponder events of the past and formulate dreams
for the future. Inevitably, his thoughts
were directed to a girl who lived in a desert city in Arizona. His musings, though tinged with loneliness,
were pleasant. Soothed by the patter of
rain outside, John melted away into a dreamless oblivion.
“You
guys, hey, wake up!”
John
struggled into wakefulness. “Wha’sa
matter? He muttered.
“There’s
water leaking in my window,” Brenda replied.
John
flicked on thelight and blinked against the sudden brightness. Checking a clock, he saw that it was 1:30 am.
“Damn
it!” Don exclaimed. “the window well
must have filled up with rain. We’ll
have to get a couple of buckets and bail it out.”
The
windows in the basement were half above and half below ground level. The ground in front of each was dug out and
lined with tin to allow air and light to enter.
When the wind was blowing strongly, it could drive the rain under and
past the eaves of the roof, fill the window wells and then leak into the
basement.
John’s
tired body protested as he set his feet on the cold concrete floor and donned
damp clothing. For some reason, everyone
dressed, though it would only be Don and John who would have to go outside and
do the dirty work. They trudged slowly
upstairs and Don and John fumbled through a foyer closet looking for raincoats
and boots. After retrieving buckets from
the laundry room, they pulled on their boots and started to leave the house
through the door in the foyer leading to the garage, avoiding the rain as long
as possible. Don took the lead, and as
he began to step down into the garage, he recoiled as though he’d been struck
by a rattler.
“Son of a
bitch,” he whispered hoarsely, his tone reflecting total horror and
disbelief. John peered around him. A wave of water was rolling into the garage.
“Wha,
what is it?” he croaked, his throat closing.
“The
creek, oh God, it’s the creek!”
For a
moment, sheer terror paralyzed John, then galvanized him into frantic
action. He bolted back to his uncle’s
room and ripped the door open.
“Uncle
Jason, Aunt Lillie,” he yelled hoarsely, “the creek has flooded clear up
here. We have to get out!”
John soon
wished he had acted a bit more calmly, for what followed were several minutes
of absolute hysteria. His aunt began
screaming and seemingly lost control of her bodily movements, while his uncle
dashed about the room trying to get dressed, but not finding anything. Had the situation not been so deadly, it
might have seemed hilarious.
Fortunately,
Jason Colgan calmed quickly and took control.
He pulled his wife over to the dresser and helped her don some
clothing. They all then rushed back to
the foyer area and frantically began donning coats and boots. To John, it seemed it was taking forever, and
the water in the garage was now lapping at the porch steps.
A
tremendous crash of shattering glass added to the panic. One or more of the windows in the basement
had given way to the outside water pressure, and it rushed into the breaches
with the thundering sound of a huge waterfall.
Brenda screamed and bolted for the rear of the house, while Don slammed
the door leading to the basement, not realizing that the water rushing in would
rise no higher than it did outside.
“Goddamit,
Brenda, get back here,” Jason bellowed, running after her. He soon came back carrying her in his arms.
“Let’s
get the hell out of here,” he yelled.
The group plunged into the murky, frigid water in the garage, which was
now waist level on Don and John. As they mucked through to a side door in the
garage leading to the backyard, they became aware of several cats thrashing
about in the water, screeching like lost souls.
“Daddy,
the cats, help them!” Brenda wailed.
“To hell
with those cats, we’ve got to get out of here now.”
The small
group, clinging to one another, left through the side door and began to move
along the back of the house.
“We’ll have
to cross the fields over to the hills by the school house before the water gets
any deeper,” Jason explained and indeed, that seemed to be their only
option. It was about two hundred yards,
but if the water didn’t rise too rapidly, they thought they could make it. John seized on the idea with a passion and
surged ahead of the others, yelling encouragement.
“Come on,
we can make it, come on!”
He
stepped out beyond the end of the house and was knocked from his feet. With a quick stab of his beefy hand, Jason
caught him by the raincoat and yanked him back before he was swept away.
“There’s
no way we can cross there, the current’s too strong once you go beyond the
house.” They only then realized that the
house was blocking the main force of the flood, and it had nearly proven fatal
for John. They huddled together in an
agony of fear and indecision.
“That
little hill beyond the back fence, it’s our best chance” Jason said after a few
moments of reflection. The hillock he
referred to was about 25 yards from the house, and at such an angle that they
should be able to approach it without being caught in the flood’s stronger
currents. The desperate group turned
back into the direction from which they had just come. When they reached the corner of the garage,
they took a forty-five degree angle toward the small hill, which was situated
just outside the backyard fence. The
ground beyond the house dropped several feet and the water level was now high
up on the men’s chests. Jason hoisted Lillie,
while Don and John held the twins out of the water. The current was bitterly cold, but their fear
kept them from feeling the full impact.
It was
with a surge of relief that they clambered up the side of the hillock, out of
the water, and collapsed in a heap at its summit. The small island on which they found
themselves was about ten yards in diameter and rose perhaps four feet above the
waterline. John was stunned by the scene
around them.
From one
side of their small valley to the other, a raging river tore through his
uncle’s land. It felt as though they
were in the middle of the Mighty Mississippi.
Great drops of biting rain pelted them, and they began to shiver
violently.
“We’re
going to freeze to death out here,” Jason noted grimly. Don and John exchanged looks, then without
saying a word plunged back into the water.
“We’ll be
right back,” Don assured everyone.
“We’re going to get some blankets and more rain gear.” No one protested.
They
quickly made their way back through the garage and up into the house, where the
water was now about a foot deep. A quick
trip to the hall closet yielded a number of blankets, and they grabbed some
light ponchos from another closet to keep them dry.
As they
reentered the water, the two boys found it necessary to hold their gear above
their heads in the depression between the garage and the hill, and Don was
forced to tread water briefly. The water
level was still rising.
At the
crest of their bit of ground, Don wrapped several large blankets around Jason,
his mother and both of the twins, then secured a poncho around them to keep it
dry. He and John wrapped themselves in
their own blankets and ponchos, then went back to the water’s edge to watch its
progress. Now that the initial frantic
activity had ceased, they were now fully able to take in their predicament. A sense of total resignation overcame John;
he had never felt so impotent.
“Kids, if
you ever wanted to pray, this is the time to do it,” Lillie said in a quavering
voice.
This
struck John as a bit odd. He pictured
God sitting remotely in Heaven, waiting on their prayers—if they made them
properly and fervently enough, he would spare them, whereas if they failed to
make that one extra plea, he might send them to their doom. Something about the image seemed terribly
warped, yet John breathed some silent prayers anyway.
Don broke
into his prayers. “John, are you afraid
to die?”
John
stared into the waters and saw eternity swirling just a few feet away, eager to
take them into its grasp. He looked to
Dan and broke the spell. “I, I don’t
know. I feel numb, like I could accept
anything right now. But I’m scared of
drowning. All we can do now is watch.”
“And
pray,” Don added. John merely nodded and
turned his attention back to the water.
At that
instant, the house began to groan like a tortured victim and everyone jumped to
their feet. It was breaking up. With a horrifying rending of splintered wood,
it was torn from the foundation and collapsed into sections which swept by the
group on a now unimpeded current. John’s
aunt and the twins were sobbing hysterically.
Their home, the heart of their family life, had been ripped away as
casually as one might brush away an offending fly. There was a finality to it that shredded
their very souls and extinguished all hope.
“Hey!!”
Don’s hoarse yell startled John and he started to scramble further up the hill
because his cousin was pointing toward the water, no doubt at some new threat.
“The
water’s going down!” he shouted exultantly.
“Are you
sure?” John asked.
“Yeah,
yeah—look. I put this rock at the edge
of the water a while ago, and now it’s a half foot below that. I think it’s crested.”
A wave of
relief swept over John that left him weak and trembling. He turned to his uncle. “Did you hear that,
Uncle Jason? The water is starting to…”
John
stopped in mid-sentence because, in his uncle’s eyes, fixed in the distance,
was the look of a man who sees death approaching. John spun to see what this new horror might
be.
He saw it
instantly. Like mounted angels of
destruction, a frothing wall was descending on the little group with fearsome
speed. Don and John raced to the knotted
group at the summit and watched the progress of the approaching waters with
terrified fascination. John knew then
they were all going to die and he no longer prayed to be saved, but for a
mercifully quick death.
They
clung to one another as the waves swept over them with a crushing fury and John
managed only to maintain a grip on Brenda.
They were tumbled about under the water, and he thought for a moment
they would drown right then, but they broke the surface and gasped for
breath. Brenda couldn’t swim and
panicked instantly. There was no way
John could even attempt to calm her as he was having trouble even maintaining a
grip. She thrashed and clawed wildly,
finally raking John across the eyes with her nails. He lost his grip and within seconds they were
as effectively separated as if by centuries of time. John was helpless to aid her, and he instinctively
focused his efforts on his own survival.
He kicked
off his boots and concentrated on keeping his head above water. This was nearly impossible as the roaring
current tossed him about like a bit of cork.
He kept swallowing and choking on mouthfuls of water. In the midst of his panic, it suddenly hit
him what he must try to do. The valley
through which the flood was rushing was intersected by a railroad embankment
that rose some fifteen feet above the surrounding terrain. The small underpass under a bridge through
which the creek normally ran was not designed to handle such a huge volume of
water and a bottleneck effect had caused the massive backup in their home’s
small valley.
It was
toward this bottleneck that John was now rushing. He was hoping the current would take him
among the trees that lined the banks of the creek, but he saw nor felt any and
presumed they’d been torn away. With a
thrill of increased adrenaline, he dimly saw the embankment and the bridge loom
up before him. He had only once
chance. Taking a deep breath, he plunged
down into the icy water as deeply as possible, in the direction of the
underpass. If he didn’t dive deeply
enough, he would be caught or crushed among the iron girders that supported the
bridge. He felt the current seize him
with ever greater ferocity and he shot through the gap with tremendous speed—or
so he hoped. Already his lungs were
bursting for air and he scrambled frantically for the surface, not even sure he
was stroking in the right direction.
He had
reached his limit. He released the air
in his lungs and kept thrashing feebly.
His lungs began to spasm, trying to draw in air that wasn’t there. He began to pass out, took in a lungful of
water, then broke the surface, choking but sucking in sweet volumes of fresh
air. John began to swim and dimly became
aware of things scratching his body, then realized he was among the branches of
a tree along the creek bed. He managed
to latch onto one and pulled himself to a more secure position to rest. He spent the next several minutes coughing
and vomiting up all the water he’d swallowed.
He was numb from the cold and knew he couldn’t stay where he was or he
would succumb to hypothermia.
He took
his bearings and realized he was several hundred yards past the underpass. The current here was almost gentle for the
water had a large plain over which to spread once it had passed under the
bridge. Releasing his hold, John swam at
a right angle to the flow for about fifty yards and then turned and weakly
stroked toward the railroad embankment, on which he knew he could walk to
safety.
He didn’t
feel as though he had much of a current to fight, but his progress was
agonizingly slow. After some minutes,
his efforts became ragged and uncoordinated and he’d begun to swallow water
again. He soon became so exhausted that
he was sorely tempted to simply succumb and surrender to the oblivion of the
black waters. But he forced himself to
keep swimming until it became a mechanical motion, without feeling. He was semi-conscious when he hit an
obstruction. He feebly tried to keep
swimming but then realized he’d hit the embankment. He tried to pull himself up out of the water,
but lacked the strength. It was line
with gravel which provided no grip and he kept sliding back.
A sudden
rage gripped him, and he made a supreme effort, scrambling wildly up the
incline, not feeling the stones ripping into his forearms and knees. When he reached the tracks, he collapsed and
began to throw up again. Again, he
couldn’t pause to recover, he had to keep moving before his strength gave out
entirely. He somehow managed to stager
to his feet and began to follow the tracks which would lead to a field behind
his grandparents’ home, which was on a rise above the flood plain.
His next
memory was the house rising before him.
He fumbled with the gate latch and stumbled to the front door. Lights were on in the house, but he took no
notice of that. He pounded weakly on the
door, which opened almost immediately and he looked into a familiar face.
“Grandpa..”
was all he managed before falling forward into darkness.
John sat
with Laurene in the grass enjoying the warm rays of a gorgeous sunset. She gazed deeply into his eyes and he was
speechless because he realized she loved him as much as he loved her. She took his hand and stroked it gently. Warmth suffused him and he had to tell her
how he felt.
“Laurene…”
he spoke aloud and the effort roused him to sudden wakefulness. John’s grandmother was sitting beside him on
the bed, holding his hand and caressing it.
Full memory returned with a bitter surge and his face creased with
emotion.
His
grandmother looked at him tenderly.
“You’re safe now, dear, just try to relax.” Sudden tears stung his eyes.
“Grandma,
I think they’re all dead,” John moaned.
“I couldn’t do a thing to help them.
I was holding Brenda, then she was gone.” The loss hit him and his grandmother pulled
him to her breast and he released his full sorrow in the refuge of her
embrace. After some time, he stopped
crying but continued to cling to her.
She pushed him back onto the pillow and gently wiped the moisture from
his cheeks.
“Don is
here, too,” she announced, and John’s heart leapt.
“Anyone
else?” he asked eagerly.
“No, at
least not yet,” she replied solemnly, tempering his hopes.
“Can I go
see him?”
“He’s
still asleep, and you shouldn’t be getting up yourself. You were nearly frozen when you came in last
night. You had me plenty worried there
for a while and there’s no doctors available right now to check on people out
here.”
“Why is
that?”
Deeper sorrow
reflected in her eyes. “Canyon Lake Dam
gave way last night. More than 200
people were killed in Rapid City, and a lot more injured. They don’t have any doctors to spare.”
John
nodded silently. “I’m better now,
grandma. I just need to see him, please—and
I won’t wake him.”
“All
right, but keep yourself wrapped in a blanket.
I don’t want you coming down with pneumonia. And drink this, too. It’ll make you feel better.” She handed John a mug of hot chocolate, which
he gulped down greedily.
It was
only when he pushed back the covers that he realized what poor shape he was
in. His hands, arms, knees and chest
were badly gouged—as were his feet. He
was weaker than he thought and it took a major effort to stand. He put some soft slippers on his damaged feet
and enfolded a thick blanket around himself.
He walked unsteadily down the hall and entered the room where his
grandmother had indicated Don was staying.
His cousin was still fast asleep and John sat in a chair near the bed.
A
multitude of emotions surged within him.
There was joy at Don’s survival, mourning over the probable fate of the
rest of the family and a rising pity for the losses his cousin would have to
accept. John became more certain the
others must have perished because none of them except Don had ever learned to
swim a stroke.
John had
been in the room for some interval when he noticed that Don was awake, lying on
his back, and staring blankly at the ceiling.
“Dan, how
are you feeling?” John asked awkwardly.
Don
slowly turned his lifeless eyes toward his cousin. “They’re all dead, you know.” There was a terrible certainty in Don’s voice
that made John shiver.
“I don’t
know what to say. If I could have died
to save them, I would have done it in a minute.
I’m sorry.” The tears were
flowing in John’s eyes again, but Don remained impassive.
Don
shrugged. “Don’t worry about me. I don’t feel anything right now. I just wish I had died with them.”
There was
nothing John could say to comfort him.
He lowered his head and simply remained in the room with Don, each
caught up in thoughts of blackness and death.
The
bodies of Jason, Lillie and the twins were recovered several days later a
couple of miles downstream. Their
funeral was one of many that week in Rapid City. Father Moynihan, who said the Mass, was on
the verge of exhaustion. John couldn’t
follow his words during the sermon, which was just as well, since they were
probably being done according to a formula that could be used multiple times during
this week of tragedy.
John’s
mother and her surviving brothers and sisters had flown in for the Mass and
burials. John’s heart was torn anew when
he saw the grief his mother was experiencing over the loss of her oldest brother,
the mainstay of the children in the Colgan family. He was struggling to make some sense of the
bitter losses, but his gut instinct was that there was no meaning to it. Whatever God’s role might be in the world, he
clearly did not intervene to prevent nature from inflicting random misery on
humans. He was convinced that he and Don
had survived not because of any divine intervention, but because of their own
determination and will to live.
After the
burials, the family returned to the grandparents’ home. Everyone went inside with the exception of
Don, who sat in a chair under a large cottonwood tree in the yard. John looked out the window from time to time,
but Don simply stared into the distance, oblivious to the world around
him. John finally decided to approach
him.
As he
neared, Don acknowledge his presence with a slight nod of his head.
“It’s
going to be tough to leave all of this,” Don said, motioning over the expanse
of the ranch with his hand.
“What are
you planning on doing?”
“I guess
I’ll continue with my plans to go to school this fall. Dad’s will leaves everything to me, so I
think I’ll just sell it all off and move into a place in town.”
“I’ve
been wondering about that because grandma mentioned it.” John hesitated, then continued. “Do you really think that’s what you should
do? I mean leave so quick?”
“I don’t
know what else to do. The house is gone
and I don’t want to impose on grandma and grandpa much longer.”
“I was
thinking about another option.”
“And what
is that?”
“Well, I
just don’t know if it would be good just to move on so quickly. You need time to adjust, to grieve and to say
good-bye to a life you will never have again.
I was thinking maybe we should stay over at the bunkhouse at South
Place, take care of all the things that need to be done on the ranch this
summer, fix it up for sale, then you go ahead with your plans this fall and
I’ll return to Phoenix.”
Don
pondered the offer. “You mean you don’t
want to go home right now?”
“Sure,
but not under these circumstances.”
John’s eyes began to water and he had to struggle to control his
emotions. “You are another brother to
me, Don, and I’d like to here for you.
It will be good for both of us.”
For the
first time, Don released his grief, bending over, holding his face in his hands
and sobbing. John knelt beside his
cousin and embraced him, crying freely.
Through his blurred vision, he saw his mother standing at the kitchen
window, watching them. She, too, was
weeping.
Later
that night, John explained his decision to his mother. She supported him completely and for the
first time since the flood, John felt some sense of peace about the whole
situation. They would get through it.
In many
aspects, the rest of the summer was much more relaxed than the previous two
John had spent in South Dakota. Uncle
Jason had always driven them hard and it had been a constant strain to maintain
the pace he demanded. Jason kept a close
watch on all their progress and with a glance could make John feel inadequate
if he hadn’t accomplished as much as his uncle expected.
John had
particularly dreaded facing him after an equipment failure because it always
resulted in a lot of down time. The
broken parts had to be removed, returned to the shop for repair or replacement
and installed again. Even a minor
breakdown could mean the loss of an entire day’s work and John could barely
stand bringing such news to his uncle.
John recalled one occasion where he had broken into tears when a
hydraulic pump gave out on his tractor during haying.
The
summer with Don was quite different.
They worked hard, but they took time for themselves. They quit work by six or seven every night
and were thus able to eat dinner at a decent hour and relax before going to
bed. They also took weekend off and
spent a lot of time with Don’s friends in Rapid City. They in turn became frequent guests out at
the ranch and John was pleased to see the way they rallied to support Don. In particular, there was a pretty girl named
Janice who took a particular interest in Don and by the end of the summer, John
could see they were quickly becoming more than friends. Don completed his application to the South
Dakota School of Mines and Technology and finalized his plans to move into
town. A real estate agent he had hired
had already received multiple offers on the ranch properties. Don would have the means to take him through
school—and well beyond.
John and
his cousin grew closer than they’d ever been and spoke intimately about every
imaginable topic. After a few weeks,
they were even able to talk about Don’s family without being overwhelmed by
grief and though John saw times when the loss pressed down on Don like an
enormous weight, his cousin was beginning to cope.
Laurene
was never far from John’s thoughts. He
envisioned the scene of their next meeting time and again, knowing that the
real life occurrence would never measure up to any of his hopeful
fantasies. He would have driven himself
crazy if it hadn’t been for Don. Here
was someone in whom he could confide on his level and who knew and loved him
deeply. By nature, Don was an extreme
optimist and by the end of the summer he had almost convinced John that he
would end up marrying Laurene. As
mid-August approached, John felt himself yearning to return to Arizona.
The night
before he left, the topic came up one last time, in a less serious way than
usual. The cousins were half-watching
television, munching chips and sipping sodas.
“Could I
ask you something?” John began. It was a
usual way of opening a conversation and Don gave him his full attention.
“Sure,
fire away.”
“Are you
falling in love with Janice?”
Huge
grins spread across both their faces.
“What do
you think?”
“I think
she’s got you like this.” John hooked
his little finger in one of his nostrils and pulled himself around the
room. Don chuckled.
“Well,
what about you, smart-ass?” he retorted.
“In your case it’s more like this.”
He whistled and patted the sofa beside him as though he were calling a
faithful puppy.
“Hey,
have you ever heard me deny it? I’m a
conquered man—Laurene just doesn’t seem to want to claim the spoils of her
conquest.”
“There
you go with that negative stuff again.”
“Ignorant
farm boy. It’s better to be realistic
than to have hopes and get entirely crushed.”
“So
you’re saying Janice is a false hope?”
John
shook his head. “No, but that’s an entirely
different situation. She actually likes
you.”
“And
Laurene likes you. You told me so
yourself.”
“It’s an
entirely different kind of ‘like”—believe me.”
“Let me
tell you, there’s not much difference between the two. It’s just a matter of confidence and being
open. If you let her know exactly how
you feel about her, she’ll start looking at you in the same way.”
John
laughed. “Right—I’m going to listen to a
man of the world like you. The only
female you were with before Janice had two horns and the only tits you handled
were between her hind legs.”
Don threw
a cushion, catching John on the side of the face.
“So what
are you—Mr Experience? What I got from
the milk cow is a lot more than you’ve ever had.”
Falling
back to a habit from their younger days, they began to wrestle and ended up
knocking over a lamp when John banged his head against an end table.
“Damn!”
he exclaimed, rubbing the newly formed bruise.
“Had
enough, huh? That’ll teach you to mess
with the big boys, football star!”
John
jumped on him again and they wrestled
until they were exhausted, neither able to gain the advantage. By unspoken agreement, they gave up the
struggle and plopped back into the couch to catch their breaths. The realization hit John that this episode of
roughhousing was the last they would likely ever share. Don was moving into an entirely new phase of
life, while John would be returning to a senior year in Arizona that hadn’t
been planned.
CHAPTER 5
Our worst fears are often actually true, which makes life a fearsome reality.
“I’m
worried about him. He just spends so
much time alone.”
Lars
Eriksson shook his head. “there’s
nothing really wrong with that. It’s
clear that kids his own age bore him.
And it’s not like he’s socially inept.
His teachers are unanimous in their praise of his leadership qualities
and the other children almost idolize him.
I think our best move is to give him the latitude he wants. He’s never given us a reason to doubt our
trust in him.”
“Maybe
you’re right, But I would…” Barbara cut
her sentence short as the subject of their conversation strode into the kitchen
and headed for the refrigerator. He
glanced at his parents and a slight smirk emerged.
“Talking
about me again, huh? Let me guess—it’s
got to be the ‘he’s spending too much time alone’ thing again, right?” Actually, as he often did, Thor had been eavesdropping
on his parents before his entrance.
Barbara
giggled. “You can practically read our
minds, can’t you?”
Thor
shrugged as he opened the refrigerator door, grabbed a carton of milk and drank
directly from the container, knowing full well it was one of his mother’s pet
peeves.
“I know,
I know,” He said in response to her frown, “It’s unsanitary. But just look at it as one less glass to be
washed.”
“I’d much
rather wash the glass,” his mother replied.
Thor
smiled as he placed the milk back in the refrigerator and pecked his mother on
the cheek as he passed by her.
“What are
you up to this weekend?” she asked.
“Not
much, just getting some reading done and my usual exercise.”
Thor went
to his room and plopped into his bed.
Closing his eyes, he let his mind wander in various directions. Wild images shot through his consciousness,
scenes of violence and death far more vivid than the pale imitations he had
grown up with on television. Beyond
being a mere observer, he imagines himself as the cause of these fantasies of
destruction and adrenaline began to course through his body. In just a few minutes, he was unable to keep
still, rose from his bed and sought out his parents, who had retired to the
family room.
“I’m
going to go down to the arcade for a while,”
he announced casually. “I won’t
be too late.”
“Have
fun, “ Lars said. “Call us if you’re
going to be out later than midnight.”
“No
problem, dad.”
His
parents would have been horrified if they had known Thor’s actual destination
that night. He hid his bike behind a
convenience store on Scottsdale Road and called a cab. A half-hour later, he arrived at one of the
seediest areas in the metro area. Van
Buren Street, once part of Route 66 was the former main thoroughfare through
the city. Since being bypassed by major
freeways, it had severely declined.
Hooker
plied their trade between Central Avenue and 44th streets, drug
dealers worked quite openly, and decaying hotels that had once filled with
tourists tourists now catered to the prostitutes and their clients. Bars were plentiful along the same stretch
and it was outside one of these that Thor had his cabbie stop. He was on the hunt.
“Aren’t’
you a bit young to be hanging out around here?” the driver asked, with real
concern.
“Don’t
worry about it, fat-ass,” Thor shot back, tossing him a 50 as he exited.
“Fuckin’
kid,” the driver muttered as he pocketed the cash.
Thor
wandered the street a bit, bantering with some of the prostitutes that sought
his attention, but it wasn’t sex he was after.
He finally took up a position outside a bar where a fleet of Harley
Davidsons was parked and studied the comings and goings of the patrons. When a particularly nasty looking knot of
individuals staggered out into the late evening, he made his move. Singling out the largest and most ominous
looking individual in the group, Thor intercepted him as he walked toward the
parking lot and purposefully bumped him in passing, nearly knocking him down.
The biker
grunted, “Goddam, watch where you’re going, boy!”
“Fuck
you, man,” Thor shot back. “You’re the
one who ran into me, you drunk bastard.”
The
bearded hulk sized Thor up and burst into a throaty laugh. “Jesus, look at this guy. Isn’t it past your bedtime? Now get home before we decide to fuck you up
just for the fun of it.”
Thor
allowed a thin smile to touch his lips, then motioned with both hands for the
biker to advance.
“Shit,
Kirk,” one of the other bikers chimed in, “The dumb little bastard wants to
fight.” This drew chortles from all four
of the bikers as well as from a few bystanders who were gathering to watch the
confrontation.
Kirk
loosened his shoulders and advanced on Thor with a sneer. “All right, I guess I’ll have to slap some
sense into the little prick. Come on,
sonny, it’s time for a lesson.”
The group
now growing rapidly around them saw a huge mismatch. Kirk was several inches over six feet,
sported a heavily muscled body that tipped the scales at over 250 pounds, and
he emanated power and menace. At
fourteen, Thor was a couple of inches under six feet and scarcely topped 160
pounds. With his blonde hair and
youthful face, he looked like a choirboy.
Yet for
ten years, Thor had thrown himself into the martial arts as a way of channeling
the aggression and frustration his grandfather’s abuse had created. His parents had long believed it was his way
of achieving discipline and physical fitness, but those were minor
considerations in Thor’s mind. He had
studied under the finest instructors with one overriding goal: To be able to disable another person as
quickly and efficiently as possible.
Thor
bolted at Kirk who foolishly raised his arms to grab at Thor. The boy deftly knocked his arms apart and
drove his thumbs into the biker’s eyes, eliciting a scream of pain and causing
Kirk to hunch over in agony. John then
delivered a smashing blow to his temple with his elbow and the biker was
senseless before he hit the ground.
Thor
looked at the others, who hadn’t even had time to react to his lightning
attack.
“Is that
all you guys got? What a bunch of
pussies.” Thor contemptuously spat on
the sprawled figure below him and calmly waited for the predictable reactions
of Kirk’s friends. Bellowing threats and
curses, they moved on Thor together.
The three
remaining bikers fared no better than Kirk had.
Even sober, they would have been no match for the lightning reactions
and superb training Thor had at his disposal.
In less than a minute, another biker was unconscious, a second sat on
the ground screaming and cradling a broken arm, while the third ran off,
stanching the flow of blood from a mangled nose. Thor had received only a glancing blow off
one shoulder and was not even breathing hard.
He turned
to the little crowd that had encircled them and shrugged his shoulders. “Show’s over,” he announced. He casually turned away, went back to the
street and watched for a cab to flag down.
One of the hookers followed him, slid her arm around his waist and
pressed against him.
“How
about some company tonight, tiger?”
Thor
appraised the woman, a striking black woman wearing a short miniskirt and tank
top that revealed most of her charms.
“Sorry, I
don’t have any money with me,” he lied.
“That’s
OK, sugar. This one can be on me. I like your style,” she replied, staring
earnestly in his eyes.
Thor was
aroused, but now suspicious. “Yeah, well
how do I know you don’t have some kind of disease? Besides, I’m only fourteen years old,
wouldn’t that make it illegal?”
“I won’t
tell if you don’t. And if you’re worried
about catching something, we can put a rubber on your little dicky.”
Thor
actually considered the offer momentarily.
“What’s
the matter, you’re not scared, are you?
Don’t tell me you’re a cherry-boy.”
Her tone was slightly mocking, and a flood of anger coursed through the
boy.
“Maybe I
am and I don’t give a damn what you think.
When I have sex, it will be on my terms, so go fuck yourself,” he
finished, pushing her away.
“You just
missed out on the best pussy you’ll ever have, you little faggot!”
Thor
flipped her off as he flagged down a passing cab.
Try as he
might, he would not be able to avoid Laurene for long. Not that he really wanted to, but he was
embarrassed to face her after the note he had left in her car at the beginning
of the summer. He had no idea if she
knew what had happened that summer and why he was back in the Valley.
John took
care of some mundane taskes, signing up for his classes as well as picking up
books and getting his locker combination.
A few people greeted him as he made his way to his locker, including a
couple of teammates. Nothing seemed out
of the ordinary as he had not shared his plans to stay in South Dakota with
anyone but Laurene, Willie, and his family.
He had fumbled with the combination on his locker several times when he
became aware of someone standing behind him.
When he turned to find Laurene, a near panic engulfed him. She was absolutely ravishing and he had no
idea what to say. She appeared a bit
bemused by his discomfort.
“Now this
is a surprise. What happened, couldn’t
your uncle put up with you for more than a summer?”
Clearly,
she had not heard any news of the tragedy and though she was making an attempt
at light humor, it still pierced John like a lance.
“Well,
no—I actually made the decision to come back myself.” He didn’t really want to start talking about
the tragedy, it would open up feelings that he didn’t feel he could
control. Yet Laurene could see there was
more to his story and she pressed him.
“Your
letter seemed so definite. To be honest,
it hit me hard, and it’s taken me most of the summer to adjust. Now that you’re back, I almost feel like it
was something you did to upset me.”
John
shook his head. “It really was my plan
at the time. Then there were
circumstances that changed everything.”
“Which
were?”
John
hesitated, struggling to formulate a response, then took a deep breath and
looked at her directly, deciding to simply be open. “My uncle, aunt and two youngest cousins died
in a flood this summer. My older cousin
Don and I were the only ones in the household to survive. I stayed with him the rest of the summer to
get the ranch ready for sale. He’s
moving into Rapid City and I decided to return home.”
In spite
of making every effort to prevent it, his eyes glistened with tears and he
tried to blink them away, without success.
Laurene was stunned, momentarily unable to respond.
“I, I
better go,” John said, turning back to close his locker.
He felt
Laurene’s hand on his arm, and she gently turned him back her direction. “I had no idea John, I’m so sorry.”
He
nodded, adding nothing more.
Laurene
reached up and gently wiped a tear away from his cheek. “If you need to talk, anytime, let me
know. I had a lot of time to think about
you this summer and now that you’re back, I want us to be friends again. That is, if you want to.”
“Sure, of
course I would like that.”
John was
surprised at the ease with which he adjusted to life at home again. The gloom which had hung over him the entire
summer dissipated, although he still found himself dwelling on the tragic
deaths of his relatives late at night before he slept, but he was now at peace
with it. He called Don frequently, who
was now living in town and starting classes.
This
year, John threw himself into football with a vengeance, it seemed a perfect
outlet. He was glad he had told his
coach nothing of his plans to stay in South Dakota, there would be no
resentments from that. As he had the
previous summers, John had missed the first two-weeks of pre-season
conditioning and drills, and the first week back was hell physically, but he
pushed himself hard.
The
Mustangs were once again heavily favored to win their fourth straight
championship under John’s leadership, and he was anxious to meet the
expectations. John had broken every
state passing record as a junior, and the top drawer of his bedroom dresser was
stuffed with letters from every major college in the country. Most of them were unopened. As long as he could remember, he had wanted
to be an Arizona State Sun Devil.
A couple
of years earlier, the Sun Devils had played in the Rose Bowl for the National
Championship and were defeated in the last minute by Ohio State. It was his personal goal to rectify that loss
when he joined the Sun Devils.
John
stepped from the locker room and snapped his chin strap in place, jogging
toward the practice field. Today was
reserved for a full-scale scrimmage and John was anxious to perform at peak
level. After a half-hour of warm-ups,
coach Howard assembled the team in the middle of the field.
“Listen
up. We’ve got our first game in less
than a week and we’re damn well going to be ready. Everybody is gunning for us this year—and
they will be every game, every quarter, every play. We’re going to run this scrimmage full out
and I want to hear some goddam hitting out there. One exception—if you get to McDonough on a
rush or a blitz, ease up on the hit.”
“Aw,
coach,” John objected immediately, “I don’t want…”
“Forget
it, McDonough. With you, we’re a great
team. If you go down, we’re in a
crapshoot with everyone else. You’ll get
all the hits you want come Friday. Do
you understand?”
“Yessir.”
“Good. Let’s do it.
First-team offense takes the ball on the 20. Let’s see you stop them, defense. Get crazy out there!” he yelled, eliciting a
roar of enthusiasm from his players.
The assistant coaches took
positions to act as referees and line judges, while the substitute players
yelled encouragement from the sidelines.
“Huddle up,” John ordered and his
teammates fell into place about him with smooth precision. The offense was returning nine of eleven
starters from the previous year and John felt a surge of confidence as he gazed
at the familiar faces.
“Did you guys know there’s a
freshman starting at left cornerback?” Brent Woods, the center volunteered as
they bent over. The news prompted a
chorus of raucous laughter.
“So let’s show him what varsity
football is all about,” suggested another lineman, Martin Walker. John smiled.
“You got it,” John replied. “Y split, 78 GO, on 2, on 2. Show him your backside, Willie.” As he had been for three previous years,
Willie was the fastest player on the team and the play called for him to run a
streak pattern down the sideline after faking a slant.
“Ready, break!” The boys clapped hands in unison and hustled
to the line of scrimmage. John stepped
up behind Brent and surveyed the defensive alignment. He could scarcely keep from breaking out in
laughter. The freshman defensive back
was lined up on Willie in single coverage, and he was playing him tight. John flexed his legs and positioned his hands
to receive the snap.
“Set!” he yelled and his lineman
and backs instantly took their down stances.
The flanker back started in motion from right to left. “Hut, hut.”
Brent crisply snapped the ball into John’s hands, who took a deep drop
looking to his left. Pads thudded and
players grunted and growled, some straining to reach John, others striving to
protect his position. In the meantime,
Willie had exploded off the line, and his defender backpedaled frantically,
then bit on his fake into the middle.
Willie blew past him down the sideline and a moment later, John looked
back his direction and smoothly lofted a beautiful spiral.
As Willie flashed by him, Thor
knew he was in trouble. He spun and
sprinted after the receiver and was in perfect position to see the ball float
into Willie’s hands at the fifty yardline.
A roar of approval rose from the sidelines and shame and anger nearly
choked Thor. He spurred himself to
greater speed and to everyone’s amazement, began to close the gap on his quarry.
Willie glanced over his shoulder
and tried to increase his speed, but Thor was relentless. As Willie crossed the ten-yard line, Thor
dove, clipped his heels and sent him down in a heap at the five. Thor jumped to his feet in a white-hot rage
and towered over downed receiver in a threatening posture.
“Wow, nice tacke, man!” Willie
said, holding out his hand for assistance to his feet.
Thor slapped it away
fiercely. “Fuck you, nigger!” he
hissed. Willie gawked at Thor in shock
as other team members rushed up to congratulate him on the catch.
“Not a smart play, Eriksson,”
Coach Howard bellowed from across the field.
“What the hell are you doing playing press coverage when you’re one on
one against the best receiver in the state?”
The offense huddled again while
Thor’s continued to fume. He now hated
John McDonough and realized he had felt that way even before this deliberate
humiliation. Although Thor was popular
with his classmates, John McDonough was the school idol. The worst thing about him was that he was a
genuinely nice person, which made Thor hate him all the more.
On the first play following the
pass completion, John pitched the ball to his halfback, Peter Carter on a sweep
to Thor’s side of the field. Thor
slipped a blocker, flashed upfield and plowed into Pete’s legs, stopping him
for a three-yard loss.
Pete returned to the huddle
limping. “He’s fired up, now,” he
announced ruefully.
“Good,” John announced, “let’s
use it against him. X sweep option left,
on one.”
The play was designed to appear
just like the previous one except Pete would pull up and pass to the tight end
running a corner pattern in the end zone.
To John’s chagrin, Thor read the play instantly, dropped into coverage
on the tight end and Pete had to eat the ball on another loss.
“Come on, ladies,” Howard
bellowed. “If you can’t get in with
first and goal from the five, I might as well retire.”
“The new kid’s playing it tough,”
Pete reported in the huddle.
“OK, let’s go the other
direction,” John said. He called for a
hook pattern on the oppositie side of the field in which the receiver would
spin back to the quarterback just after crossing the goal line.
Thor had worked himself into a
frenzy. As John came up behind center,
Thor edged away from his coverage on Willie and started his momentum toward the
backfield. When the ball was snapped, he
blitzed across the line. John set
himself, looking for his receiver in the opposite direction. A thrill of excitement coursed through Thor
as he bore down on the oblivious quarterback.
He lowered his helmet, smashing into John just as he was in his thowing
motion, wrapped his arms around him, lifted him, then drove him into the ground
with a sickening thud. He raised his
head to enjoy the look of shock and pain on John’s face.
“I’ll kill you, motherfucker!”
Thor spat.
More than the hit he had taken,
John was shocked by the savage hatred that blazed in Thor’s eyes. An instant later, a rough hand grasped Thor
by the facemask and jerked him to his feet.
“What the hell are you doing, Eriksson?”
coach Howard screamed, shaking Thor violently.
“Are you out of your goddam mind, or are you just stupid? I didn’t call for a blitz and you sure as
hell heard what I said about hitting McDonough.
Now get your sorry ass over to the bench.” He pushed Thor away and anxiously bent over
John to assess the damage.
Thor headed for the bench,
bypassed it, and ambled casually toward the locker room.
“Eriksson, get your ass back
here!” one of the assistant coaches yelled.
Thor raised a hand and made an obscene gesture without bothering to look
back.
Howard was beside himself. “You’re off
the team, asshole, turn in your gear before you leave my locker
room.” Thor raised his hands above his head and clapped
in mock approval.
John McDonough was puzzled and
upset. The encounter with Thor had left
him physically and emotionally shaken, and he went through the rest of the
scrimmage in a near daze. He kept
picturing Thor’s blazing eyes and tried to analyze the shocking emotion behind
them. John had never had a real enemy in
his life with the exception of Stan, but he felt certain he had one now—for
reasons he couldn’t comprehend. By the
time he hit the showers, he was determined to do something about it.
At lunch the following day, while
standing in line with Willie at the cafeteria, he carefully searched groups of
students at the tables. He smiled as he
realized that after three years, he could map out the cliques that had staked
their territories. It didn’t take long
to spot Thor. He was at a freshman table
surrounded by an entourage of classmates.
He was laughing and joking with several cute girls and he was obviously
the center of attention. John frowned in
an attempt to picture Thor’s boyish face as it had appeared clouded by
fury. Willie followed his friend’s gaze.
“That kid is bad news, man. I told you last night he called me a
nigger. And it looked like he was trying
to kill you.”
John nodded, then said, “Hold my
place, I’ll be right back.”
Taking a deep breath, he strode
resolutely toward the golden-haired freshman.
He was only about halfway across the cafeteria when Thor saw him coming,
stopped speaking in mid-sentence, and stared at John with ice in his dark blue
eyes. John fought a sudden urge to
bypass the table as if he were headed somewhere else, but forced himself to
stop. Thor’s lips curled in a
contemptuous sneer and John felt a sudden nervousness knot his stomach.
“Uh, Thor, could I, uh, could I
talk with you for a minute?” he began, flushing at his awkward approach and inwardly
cursing himself for being so needlessly intimidated, by a freshman, of all
people.
A cruel smile twisted Thor’s lips
and John suddenly felt emotionally naked beneath his penetrating gaze. “What’s the matter with you, McDonough? I thought you were the big man on
campus. Why is it I get the feeling
you’re scared shitless?”
Again, John was completely thrown
off-guard by the bitter hatred revealed in Thor’s words and expression. With an effort of will, he regained mastery
of his emotions and composure.
“Thor, I don’t know what you’ve
got against me, or Willie for that matter, but I just came over to apologize if
I embarrassed you yesterday. It was
nothing personal, we always pick on freshmen like that—it’s kind of an
initiation. Anyway, you obviously have a
lot of talent and if you’d like to get back on the team, I’d be glad to talk to
Coach Howard on your behalf.”
“Don’t do me any favors,
McDonough---And don’t forget what I told you on the field.”
John shrugged. “Sorry you feel that way, Thor,” he said,
returning Thor’s hostile stare with a calm, steady gaze. He turned his back on the freshman and walked
away.
“Jesus, Thor. What was that all about?” one of his friends
asked. “John McDonough is a good guy.”
“He’s an asshole,” Thor snapped
back. Then, recognizing the reactions of
all the others around him, he backed away.
His face softened and he smiled.
“Hey, look, I’m sorry, I’m sure he’s a great guy and I’ll apologize to
him later. I was just upset because I
screwed up so badly yesterday, it was my own fault. His friends embraced his show regret and one
of the girls took him by the hand. They are such sheep, he thought to
himself.
By the time he graduated the
following spring, John McDonough had forgotten Thor Eriksson even existed.
Laurene lived up to her expressed
desire for a renewed friendship. They
had two classes together, Senior English and History and she sat by John in
both classes. She was still dating Stan,
but they rarely mentioned him. At least
he had graduated and wasn’t in the school on a day-to-day basis. However, he was there every day to pick
Laurene up after cheerleading practice.
As always, their contact was a
source of both hope and despair for John.
He was more deeply in love with her than ever, yet she seemed more
committed to Stan than before. Other
people noted his obvious devotion to Laurene and it slowly became a topic of
discussion in the school, with most people, especially the girls, not
understanding why Laurene didn’t reciprocate his feelings.
Many times as they talked, John
was certain that she felt something more for him than mere friendship, but she
kept it obscured. He longed to bring it
forth, but didn’t know how, especially since his last attempt had been rebuffed
so firmly. He didn’t want to risk losing
her friendship again so he didn’t push the issue.
At the end of November, John had
led his team to the championship game once again. It was to be played in Sun Devil Stadium, the
very place John would be performing the following year. Since the one loss his freshman year, The
Scottsdale High Mustangs had gone undefeated and had attracted national
attention for their winning streak. Each
game seemed to bring a little more pressure, but John thrived on it.
The Knights of St. Mary’s were
the opponents that night. John found he
was unable to achieve is usual state of pre-game intensity against a Catholic
school he had seriously considered attending, and for which some of his
grade-school friends were now playing.
Nevertheless, he took the field with the intention of playing the best
game of his life.
The Mustangs won the coin toss
and elected to receive. As he watched
the return team from the sidelines, the crowd began to roar in
anticipation. St. Mary’s had also gone
undefeated and they had a huge following of fans. The college stadium was almost full, an
amazing turnout for a high school game and John could feel the emotion surging
through the stands. He glanced toward
the stands behind him, turned his attention to the cheerleaders and spotted Laurene. He did so only momentarily, not wishing to
make it obvious.
Willie took the kickoff at the
ten yard line and returned it to the thirty.
Adrenaline puming, John jogged out to the huddle. His teammates bent around him, completely
attentive.
“This is it,” John said. “The last game we’ll ever play together as a
team. In a couple of hours, this game
will be nothing but a memory. Let’s make
sure it’s a good one.” He called the
first play, a power sweep to the left side of the field, and with the first
snap of the ball, all nervousness faded.
The Mustangs dominated the
Knights. Apart from a touchdown on their
first possession, St. Mary’s was unable to generate any offense. John threw for four touchdown passes—three of
them to Willie and the final score read 42-7.
When the final whistle blew, the celebration began. Fans surged around John to congratulate
him. He kept watching for Laurene, but
she never came up, though all the other cheerleaders did. He finally caught a glimpse of her. She was walking toward the end zone with her
arm around Stan’s waist and his was draped over her shoulder, pulling her
close.
A flash of anger overwhelmed John
and he briskly made his way back to the locker room, greeting people cordially
but briefly. His celebration had ended
quickly. Reaching his locker, he
stripped off his uniform, went into the showers and turned it on as hot as he
could bear. He accepted the wild celebration
going on around him, but responded only when directly approached by a
teammate. He stayed in the shower long
after his teammates were out. There was
a terrible sense of urgency building within him about Laurene, so strong that
he was feeling physically ill. He
wondered if she and Stan were celebrating that night by having sex and the thought
of it left him in near despair.
“Hey, man, aren’t you
coming? They reserved an entire
restaurant for us, you know. It’s going
to be a wild time!”
John turned to find that the
voice, distorted by the echoes in the locker room, belonged to Willie.
“I don’t know, I thought I’d call
it a night. I’m beat.”
“Don’t give me that. I know what it is. Besides, she will probably be there,
too. After all, she’s the head
cheerleader.”
“Great, that will make me feel a
whole lot better, watching her dance with that asshole all night.”
Willie grimaced. “Come on, John. I won’t feel much like celebrating without
you there. Like you said in the huddle,
times like tonight will only be memories come tomorrow morning, so let’s enjoy
the moment.”
It was worse than he could have
anticipated; Laurene and Stan were both there.
Although John and Laurene were on friendly terms at school, he never saw
her glance his way all night, though she had to have known he was there. He at least expected some sort of perfunctory
congratulations, but it never came. In
addition, Stan was all over her, never letting up for a moment, whether it was
holding her close on the dance floor or fawning over her while they sat at
their table with a group of his friends and most of the other cheerleaders and
their dates.
Stan seemed to have total control
over Laurene and John found himself becoming angry with her for allowing it to
happen. He talked some more with Willie
about it, but venting his feelings only made him more miserable. He filled the rest of the night engaging in
idle chatter with people congratulating him about the game, then excused
himself as early as possible, unable to watch Stan and Laurene enjoying
themselves any longer.
When he got home, he made an
effort to appear cheerful for his family’s sake and they were so excited over
his performance in the championship game they didn’t notice his underlying
mood. As soon as he could, he said
goodnight and turned into bed. As often
happened when he thought about Laurene, sleep proved to be elusive. After tossing and turning for a couple of
hours, he was beginning to nod off when he heard a tapping on his window. It took only a swift glance to recognize Laurene
silhouetted outline against the moonlit sky and a surge of sheer exhilaration
coursed through him. Pulling a bathrobe
around himself, he went across the room and raised the window.
“Hi, how are you?” he asked
simply.
Laurene smiled sheepishly and
shrugged. “Not so good. I feel horrible about the way I ignored you
tonight. It’s just that Stan has gotten
worse about us interacting and I didn’t want to make trouble. I’m sorry if I hurt you, I’m sure I did.”
John’s earlier anger had melted
away, replaced by a deep concern for Laurene.
“I understand, though I do have to admit it bothered me.” She nodded and he paused, before continuing,
“Laurene, I just want you to know that if things don’t work out with Stan, I’ll
always be here. Let’s make a good effort
to remain friends, at least at school.”
She smiled at that. “It’s a deal.
I’ll see you in class on Monday.”
“I’ll be there.”
That short conversation opened a
wider avenue between them. There were so
many times when John felt that Laurene was feeling just as strongly about him
as he did about her. However, nothing
overt was said or done and times apart from her were agonizing for him.
In one short week, everything
between them changed forever. The
English class went to the library for research projects and John, after
selecting a few titles, sat down at a table with Laurene and Rachel Brown,
another of the varsity cheerleaders.
Rachel greeted them with a smile, then left to search for some more
reference materials. Laurene greeted him
in a subdued fashion and John knew something was seriously amiss. They sat in awkward silence for several
minutes before Laurene spoke.
“I think I should probably move
my seat.”
John was puzzled. “What do you mean—here or in class?”
“Both. People are talking about us and a lot of
things have been getting back to Stan.
It would be a lot easier for me if we limited any contact we have.”
John suddenly felt sick and
sorrowful, emotions all too familiar when it came to his dealing with Laurene. He allowed nothing to register in his
expression, or so he hoped. There was
another awkward pause before he broke in again.
“I have to admit, I didn’t see
that coming, but I understand. You don’t
have to move, I will.”
Without giving Laurene time to
respond, he scooped up his books. He
retreated between aisles of books into the most isolated part of the
library. He pulled down a book at
random, opened it, and stared blankly at the pages. He remained nearly motionless for the next
half hour until the bell ending class sounded.
He had already decided to skip lunch and remain there.
He was roused to awareness of his
surroundings by a gentle touch on his arm.
He turned to find that Laurene had tracked him down and she stared at
him sorrowfully as he realized his cheeks were awash with tears. She pressed her fingertips to her mouth in
concern.
“John, I’m so sorry, I didn’t
know what I saw saying. To be honest
with you, I feel like I shouldn’t even be with Stan anymore. There’s someone else I care for too much.”
John struggled to absorb this
revelation. All the hopes he had held
for so long and which had been crushed so often now leapt to life again.
“I know I probably shouldn’t even
say this, and it sounds crazy, but it’s true.
Ever since we first met, I’ve never been able to imagine a future
without you in it.” The words rushed
forth almost against his will and he feared the reaction they might evoke.
Laurene responded by reaching out
and taking one of his hands in hers. “I felt
that way the first time I saw you throwing a football around with your brothers
on the front lawn. But I’m just really
confused right now. I have a lot to work
out, especially with Stan, so I hope you can give me the time and space to do
it.”
John nodded. “I think you already know how patient I can
be. And remember, when you need someone
to talk to, I’m a pretty good listener.”
“I know you are. I have to get going now, but we will have
more time to talk, I promise.”
As she walked away, John could
scarcely contain his elation. He was now
certain his love for Laurene would not be in vain. He was more determined than ever to do
everything in his power to ensure they would end up together. It was their destiny.
With that breakthrough, Laurene
displayed a renewed willingness to interact with him at school. They even started having lunch together on a
daily basis—an activity which did not go unnoticed. Outside of school, their contact was still
limited by Stan’s domination of Laurene’s time.
Nevertheless, they began to speak often late at night—Laurene using her
sister’s cell phone to prevent snooping from Stan, who often grabbed her phone
to check on her calls.
Laurene began to open up in ways
John had never imagined and he did likewise.
He found it incredibly difficult not to openly proclaim his love for
her, but he knew she didn’t need that additional pressure right now. The only topic that was off-bounds was
Laurene’s relationship with Stan. John
tried to approach it several times in an oblique manner, but she quickly
maneuvered the conversation in other directions.
The night Christmas vacation
began, Laurene called John late in the evening, as had become their routine.
“Hello, how are you doing?” She
asked simply after he answered.
“Good. It’ll be nice to have a couple of weeks off
from school.”
She hesitated and John could tell
she wanted to discuss something more serious.
“I guess I could enjoy it, too,
if I didn’t feel like I was under so much pressure.”
This was new. She was obviously referring to Stan and he
decided to do everything he could to encourage her to talk about the situation.
“I think I know what you’re
talking about. It’s not easy being torn
in several directions.”
“John, he really does have an
irrational hatred of you. It scares me
and then it’s almost as if he directs it at me sometimes.”
John immediately felt a deep
anxiety. “You’re not talking about
physical violence, I hope.”
“No, at least not yet. But he has heard all the talk about us
becoming closer and it’s made him furious.
I’ve had to lie to him just to keep him reasonable.”
John shook his head. “I know I can’t be very objective about this
whole thing, but it seems obvious to me that shouldn’t be a part of a
relationship. You can’t make someone
keep loving you by intimidating them.”
“You’re right, of course, but I’m
having a hard time handling this. After
all, we’ve been together for over three years now. That sort of involvement doesn’t end in a
day.”
John wondered if she were
referring indirectly to her sexual involvement with Stan, but decided not to
pursue that avenue. If she wanted to
talk about it, she would have to bring it up more candidly than that. The thought of it sent a wave of jealousy
through him, as well as a surge of resentment against Stan for taking advantage
of Laurene.
“John?” her voice interrupted his
train of thought.
“Oh, sorry, I was just thinking
about what you said. I guess there are
no easy answers.”
“No, there aren’t. But please don’t turn against me, even if I
deserve it. I mean, sometimes I think if
you really knew me, you wouldn’t like me very much.”
Now John was nearly certain she
was expressing regret over her sexual involvement with Stan, but it still
wasn’t clear enough to talk about.
“It doesn’t matter, Laurene. There’s nothing you could tell me or I could
find out about you that would change the way I feel about you. Nothing.”
“Maybe someday we’ll have the
chance to put that to the test.. Anyway,
I just wanted to wish you a good night.”
“You too. Talk to you tomorrow.”
“Sure.”
The next night, John was up late
watching Saturday Night Live in his room when he heard the doorbell ring. He knew his mother was still up and decided
to let her answer it. That was soon followed
by a knock on his door.
“John, can I come in?” It was his
mother’s voice.
“Of course, Mom, come in.”
A deep furrow of concern on his
mother’s brow immediately caught his notice.
“Laurene’s at the door. She says it’s very important that she speak
with you. She’s crying.”
John bolted upright and rushed
down the hall, across the living room and into the foyer where Lauren was
waiting. She was sobbing and when she
saw him, rushed into his arms. He held
her close as she wept, almost hysterically.
She finally pulled back a bit,
looking at him with puffy, bloodshot eyes.
“Can we talk privately?” she
began. “I need help and there’s no one
else I can turn to.”
“Of course, let’s go down to the
rec room in the basement.”
John led her downstairs and into
a room which held a ping pong table, a couch, bookcases, and a big screen
TV. They sat down and John held both of
Laurene’s hands in his and waited for her to speak. She drew a deep breath and gathered herself,
dropping her gaze as she began to speak.
“Stan and I have been having sex
together since the summer before my junior year.”
“I know, I recognized that when
it started happening.”
She looked up in surprise. “How could that be, I’ve never breathed a
hint of it to anyone, even my closest friends.”
John shook his head. “You didn’t have to. After it happened, I knew the moment I saw
you looking at me from down the hallway at school. It hurt to realize that, but mostly I just
felt badly for you, because I knew you weren’t ready for such intimacy.”
“Why was I so stupid? I never wanted to start and I told him time
after time, but it ended up happening anyway.”
“It’s not your fault. Guys just keep pushing and they learn how to
manipulate feelings to get what they want.
I’m sure you heard all the lines from Stan that your mother warned you
about.”
“And then some—and I eventually
gave in. Then, after it happened once,
it was like I gave up resisting—until last night. With the way things have been going between
us, I knew it had to stop. I didn’t tell
Stan in that manner but I did tell him I wasn’t going to have sex with him
anymore, not unless we were married.”
“So how did he react?”
“He went berserk. He knew you were the reason and he gave me
hell for it. So then I told him I wanted
to break things off completely and I left.
So he called me earlier today, acting sweet as can be and he even apologized. He said he could handle it if I wanted to end
things between us, but he wanted one more date to give me things back that he
said he wouldn’t be able to keep. So I
agreed. Before I knew it, we ended up at
his cousin’s condo, which is where we always went when he wanted to have
sex. He claimed it would be just to
talk.” She started tearing up again and
John squeezed her hands more tightly in his.
“Are you saying he ended up
raping you?” A deep, cold anger was
building in John.
“Yes. But how could I ever claim that after all the
times I’d slept with him? He hurt me, John,
he hurt me badly, and when he was done, I was lying there in a daze when he
ripped all the covers away, flipped on some bright lights and held me.” Her eyes were glistening again. “Someone was in the doorway, taking pictures
of me,” she wailed.
“That Bastard,” John whispered,
“That goddam bastard.”
Again he pulled Laurene into the
refuge of his arms as she released a stream of bitter emotion.
“Do you have any idea who the
person taking the pictures was?”
Laurene shook her head. “No, I mean there was something familiar
about him and I heard him laugh, but I just couldn’t see, plus I was
practically in shock.”
A sudden suspicion hit John. “This may sound crazy, but could it have been
Coach Summers?”
Laurene inhaled sharply at the
mention of his name. “Yes, yes! That was the laugh, I knew I had heard it
before. How in the world would have
guessed that?”
“Just a hunch and it’s not the
first time he and Stan have collaborated to do some dirty shit. So tell me, what kind of threat did Stan
make? That’s the only reason he would
have done something so insane.”
“He said he was never going to let me go
and that if I didn’t give up seeing you, he was going to e-mail the pictures to
my parents and everyone at school.”
John could see she was terrified at the
prospect and John’s thoughts ran chaotically as he imagined Laurene having to
face her parents if the pictures were revealed.
“There’s only one thing to do.”
“What’s that?”
“I’ll have to get the camera as well as
any pictures they may have uploaded to their computers.”
“How can you possibly do that?”
“It looks like I’m going to have to break
into two residences. I need you to tell
me everything you know about Stan’s house.”
Laurene was terrified. “John, please, don’t do anything foolish.”
“Don’t worry, I’ll be careful, but
something has to be done quickly. Now
you need to go home and get some sleep.
I need time to think and plan this out.”
After John led Laurene home, he went for
a long walk. He already had a
preliminary plan in mind, but it would require immediate action, he couldn’t
afford to give Stan and Coach Summers time to store the pictures in more
locations and perhaps distribute them to others privately before they released
them as Stan had threatened.
Early the next morning, he called Laurene
on her own cell, which he had rarely done before.
“There’s one thing we need to set up
right now,” he told her.
“What’s that?”
“Chances are that Stan is going to call
you to put more pressure on you. I know
you don’t want anything to come out publicly, but if it does, we need to record
any calls he makes to you. My brothers
were on a spy kick a while back, they have a little device to plug into your
cell that will record calls. Whatever
you do, don’t let him suspect that we know Coach Summers was involved.”
“Please,
I couldn’t take it if all this became public.”
“You know
I will do everything to keep that from happening. I’ll bring the recorder over in a few
minutes"
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