Like People in History (11 page)

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Authors: Felice Picano

Tags: #Fiction, #Gay, #Gay Men, #Domestic Fiction, #AIDS (Disease), #Cousins, #Medical, #Aids & Hiv

BOOK: Like People in History
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Judy, her car, and Alistair's cash were requisitioned for a trip to Granny Pizza, down the road. I joined her and "Crash," a red-haired boy, to bring back the goodies. All the short distance to the take-out place and back, Crash sat behind us, backward on the Vette's ledge, so that his legs lay spread across the trunk and his head lay in my lap—Judy would grab his nose instead of the gearshift every once in a while and say, "Oops."

While we waited for the pizzas, Crash told us he was the best backward surfer in the country, probably the world, which I thought a dubious distinction at best.

"I do everything backward or upside down," Crash said in his slow, deliberate way, and he went on to expound his theory of upside down and backward to us—"Ya see, if everything were upside down, then no one could hassle ya, because no one would know what side was up, ya get it?"

To which Judy replied, "Does that mean Jewel has to smell your nasty old feet while you're boffing her?"

I was surprised to see Alistair stripped down to his bathing trunks, surfing the pipeline with the others when we got back. Surprised, I suppose, to see how well he fit in with the others, who joshed with him and seemed to accept him as one of their own.

After we'd all eaten and lain around on the sand complaining that we'd eaten too much, I was also lured into the water. One of the fence boards was pulled up for me to ride, and Sandy, returned to his friends— "Hey, Lamebrain! It's your turn to play slip the weenie," he shouted to another lad as he exited—rode out next to me beyond the breakers, and in between chewing a wedge of vegetarian whole-wheat pizza and constantly rearranging his penis in his jams, he tried to explain to me how to "take the ass end of a wave" without killing myself.

Following about a hundred spills and near drownings, I managed to keep my footing long enough to ride a minor tunnel all the way in, stepping off the board onto a half inch of water and dry sand just as they did—to assorted cheers and jeers.

That was the signal for us to leave. Judy was already at the car, and I was shocked to see that it was almost sunset. The boys were still on their boards out at the breakers as we drove away.

"Have fun?" Judy asked, as she dropped us off at the house.

I'd thought that she'd paid particular attention to me that afternoon, given all the boys she'd been surrounded by. She'd gotten up from her towel to urge me on when I was riding a wave; she'd praised my nerve and resolve when I'd finally succeeded in taking one in.

"Sure," I said. "What about you? You hardly got wet."

"I have my own kind of fan," she said enigmatically. "Tomorrow?"

"Sure," I replied.

Alistair put a comradely arm about my shoulder as we walked to the house. "Don't get carried away, okay?" he said, as the Vette sent up a sheet of gravel driving away.

Before I could ask him to explain, we were inside, and Cousin Diana was standing there, holding a hand over the phone receiver.

"Whenever you find the time, Mr. Dodge."

Alistair let go of me. "What is it now?" The change in his voice was evident.

"I want to talk to you about Dario," she said.

"What about him?"

"Don't you want to shower and change, honey?" Cousin Diana asked me.

I took that as a command. Despite the noise of the shower from my rooms at the end of the big house, I could hear them shouting at each other.

 

That first day seemed to set the pattern for the following weeks. We'd get up, breakfast around the pool, Judy would come by or would phone, and after Alistair had annoyed Inez and played whatever game it was he was playing with Dario, we'd spend the rest of the day away from the house: hanging around Westwood's shopping area—filled with students and teens—or stopping by the Malibu beach house of a once famous German émigré novelist, to visit his two adolescent children, or driving down to Hollywood and Vine and wasting time, or sunning and playing volleyball at Will Rogers State Park with Siggie and Marie-Claude and other friends of Judy's, under tall cliffs at the top of which perched an enormous glass and redwood-roofed structure. I was told Aly Khan had erected it for Rita Hayworth as a honeymoon cottage. To each side and beneath the edifice—now a restaurant— could be seen cannon-emplacement bunkers built high into the cliffs during the last war, now gunlessly guarding the shore from Japanese sneak attacks. More often, we'd end up at Jewel's Box, which I soon realized was the preferred spot because it was farthest from interfering parents.

Before I'd left, my mother had told me that Alistair was different from the snotty know-it-all little boy he'd been at nine. During my first weeks in Southern California, I had to agree with her assessment. Possibly because he wasn't a stranger, but in his own element, Alistair was far friendlier to me, far easier with me than I had any right to expect. He introduced me to strangers without a hint of that involuntary wince teenagers make and other teens instantly recognize as saying, "I don't like him either, but I have to!"

Alistair left me and Judy together with no compunction while he went off with the others. He never once put me down or sneered at me. He would quietly and in detail explain who people I'd just met or was about to meet were and what their relationships were. Whenever I did something to show that I too fit in—chugalugging a bottle of beer, taking a strong wave into shore—he'd make sure the others knew of it: "Hey! Did you see that!"

Which hardly constituted intimacy. Alistair never told me anything in the least bit private, certainly not his hopes and dreams—and he never asked mine, or even allowed such a topic to arise. I knew that Judy wanted to become a Broadway dancer—a gypsy, she called it. Or a pediatrician. She wavered day to day. I told her my own troubles with my family that summer, how I'd come to hate everything about my life, and had so managed to annoy and depress them all that finally I'd been shipped off to here, this paradise, to cheer me up and, they hoped, to change my attitude. I didn't think I'd yet managed to change my mind about the complete hopelessness of my condition come next fall, when I was slated to go to a state college to study who knew what for Lord knew what kind of eventual career—all of them stank so far as I was concerned.

No, Alistair never spoke of his future, of his mother, or of Alfred. He never mentioned his father either. They seemed to see each other less and less as Alistair got older. And the one time I brought up how great I thought his business project was, Alistair said, "Who wants to work all one's life? This development ought to net me a half million. I'll invest that, and when I get my trust fund at twenty-one, I should be able to do whatever I want." Although what this latter consisted of, he wouldn't even deign to hint to me.

At first I'd assumed that he and Judy were going steady. Wasn't that why he'd been about to warn me on that first day? But as the days passed, I became increasingly uncertain about their relationship. Although Alistair and Judy were together every day, they never held hands, or smooched, or vanished suddenly, to make out the way all the "steadies" I'd ever known did. Once we would arrive at a place, Alistair seemed to leave Judy pretty much on her own. She'd pull out a paperback book or a fashion magazine and read, or talk to Jewel or Marie-Claude or me. From the instant we'd met, I'd thought Judy both incredibly pretty and ultrasophisticated. The more time I spent with her, the more I realized how much of that was merely on the surface. Underneath, Judy was very like the girls I'd known in high school: a little anxious, a little confused, eager to be liked, maybe even loved. When I asked if she minded Alistair ignoring her so much, she said, with a bit of irritation, "He's not my keeper, you know!"

Another time, while slathering suntan lotion upon the creamiest skin of her upper back, I said, "When you and my cousin are married..."

She sat up. "Married? You're kidding?"

"I thought..."

"If I marry anyone, it'll be Tab Hunter. Or Troy Donahue." She laughed suddenly. "Well,
one
of us will marry Tab Hunter or Troy Donahue."

"One of you?"

"Stairs or me," she said, as though I should already have known that. "My upper thighs, Stodge, please," she added, using the name she and Alistair had invented for me and which constituted my acceptance.

I could have, I should have, asked right then what exactly Judy meant. I thought I knew, but I was both confused and fearful of the explanation. Partly because the signals around me were so confounding.

Back home, in school, among my friends, boys that were effeminate or wimpy or sometimes just ugly, poorly dressed, and pimple-faced were often called faggots and fairies: everyone agreed; no explanations were necessary. In junior high, we'd been more open, more free. We'd played a game in class and through the halls where we'd do something, anything, to draw attention to our crotch in some way, and when someone fell for it and looked, we'd shout with joy, "Gotcha!" And it had been commonplace to push someone and yell out, "Eat it raw! Through a flavor straw."

At first, it seemed the same among the Jewel's Box gang of youths. They were always calling each other "homos," and should one of them become too tender or solicitous, another would quickly bare his bottom and say, "Kiss this, queer!" Jewel and Alistair and Judy were constantly referring to various people—among them my cousin—as "pervs and perverts." Walking with Crash and Sandy along the boardwalk at Venice one afternoon, I'd been surprised to hear Sandy say of a man sitting on a bench, "That guy's a hummersexual."

"Homosexual," I corrected.

"We call 'em hummersexual, because whenever you pass one, he goes, hmmmmmmm!" Sandy illustrated.

Sure enough as we passed by, the man went "Hmmmmmmmm!"

Yet sometimes when I'd go into the house at Topanga for an OJ or soda, I'd find two or more boys napping together on a mattress in the darkened smaller bedroom, their clothes off, their legs and arms entwined, their hands wrapped around each other's penis. And whenever Alistair went into the smaller bedroom with one or more boys, "to drink beer and fool around," as Crash explained it, the door was firmly closed and everyone else excluded, suggesting
something
more than beer drinking was going on. Then there was the discussion held around an impromptu beach fire one overcast afternoon after Sandy's older brother Cryder had spent a night in jail for "soliciting" on Santa Monica Boulevard.

"Soliciting what?" I'd asked.

"Money, stupid," Stevie said.

I'd seen Cryder riding the Topanga Pipeline, a lean, aggressive boy. He didn't look like the type to beg for money on a street corner.

"I don't get it," I admitted, already expecting their jeers.

Stevie took it upon himself to explain. "Let's say you need some cash, fast. Can't get a job at our age, right? So you go a block north of Hollywood Boulevard, where the steps stick out almost to the street, and you sit there and wait till some guy comes by in a car. When he stops, you talk a little and he asks if you want a ride. You say sure, and you get in and you tell him your ma didn't get her paycheck and you need twenty bucks and he says sure, okay."

"He gives you the money just like that?"

"Well, usually you have to put out." Stevie emphasized the last two words. "We've all done it one time or another."

"It's easy," Spencer agreed. "I never wait more than five minutes."

"I made fifty bucks once," Crash boasted, then was forced to explain that that had required two drivers stopping.

All of which left me even more confused. What had they put out? What had they or the drivers done? If it was what I thought it was—no! It couldn't be! I let the subject drop.

After all, I didn't need money; after all, I was interested in Judy, who seemed interested in me. But although she'd slap my hand away whenever I was oiling her body and tried going into her bathing suit, she never got up or walked away. And once, when she was on her stomach reading and I was watching her bathing suit's dropped straps threaten to bare one of her breasts, she suddenly turned to me and saw what I was staring at and, to my surprise, pulled the blue cotton cup right off it, revealing a pointed red tip.

"There! Happy?" she asked.

"Let me touch it."

"Oh, okay!"

This lasted about five minutes while she continued—or pretended to continue—to read
Seventeen,
before someone came along and she slapped my hand away and popped the breast neatly back into her bathing suit.

It was the very next morning, over huge slices of Crenshaw melon and cups of thick Dominican coffee on the pool terrace, that Alistair said, "Stodge, Judas, you're going to have to play without me this morning."

"Why?"

"I've got to put on a jacket and tie and crap and go with
them
[meaning Cousin Diana and Alfred] to meet with some ghastly bank guy. Should be done by noon. Tell me your shit-ule [parodying Alfred's accent]. I'll catch up with you later."

Alistair didn't catch up with us that afternoon. He was lying on a chaise longue near the pool talking on the telephone when I returned.

"Do you mind?" he asked when I settled next to him. Then he half explained: "Lawyers!"

This was the Alistair from before that I'd remembered. I left.

A few hours later, however, he came into my room and sat there watching me go through my clothing—he and Judy had forced me to buy more at stores they'd selected—and he semi-apologized and explained a bit more:

"It's the project. Either I underbudgeted or Mother and Alfred are overspending. Whichever it is, we have to refinance. The guy we met the other day was a complete shark! Still was picking his teeth from eating the last idiot he'd snookered. I turned him down flat.
They
bitched and moaned, but... So, we're going to have to keep looking for a better deal. What a pain in the ass! Bankers!"

As he talked, I recalled the sense I'd had as a nine-year-old whenever Alistair had talked about custody and divorce. It all seemed so grownup, and I so very backward. Even with his complaints, or maybe because of them, I once again felt out of it, behind the times, a kid.

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