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Authors: Steven Parlato

BOOK: The Namesake
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Feb. 22, 1976 (Sunday night)

Journal —

What the hell’s going on? Had a real strange conversation with Father Fran after Mass. He said he called yesterday to discuss “my relationship with Anthony.” He acted like Tony and I are a couple!

Plus, he knew way too much about Tony flipping out. Obviously, they talked. I think Tony’s jealous because Father and I’ve been friends for so long. Man! That’s it for now. — E
.

Dad’s poetry may have been “rich and emotive,” but this journal’s shaping up to be a page-turner. Despite her warning — “There are worse things than not knowing!” — my meeting with Shirl was pretty encouraging. It’s clear I’m onto something. I can’t wait to see Lex in class.

It’s about ten minutes ’til psych, so I’ve ducked into the boys’ room to read. It’s as good as the library for quiet study — aside from the smell. Time for one more entry.

February 24, 1976, 2:14 A.M
.

Holy shit! Just had the most insane dream
.

No chance I’m getting back to sleep. Oh, man
.

It started out amazing. Me and Melody hot and heavy in the gym. She undressed as I spread my jacket on the floor. Kneeling, she giggled, unzipping my fly. I close my eyes, waiting
.

But the laugh gets deeper, scary. She’s talking, but it’s not her voice. It’s Tony’s — praying, “Oh my God, I am heartily sorry … ” Then I woke up — THANK GOD! That was psycho!

I’ll say. I’m shaking. A memory leaks in: the cellar, a huge daddy longlegs drops from the rafters, skitters down my neck. I flinch, nearly drop the journal. Suddenly I don’t want to read anymore. But I can’t stop. I turn the page.

Feb. 25, 1976

Happened again — THE DREAM. Just snapped awake (1:43) drenched with sweat. It was even worse. Instead of Melody, Tony’s mouth on me. I try pushing him off. But he’s too strong. I clamp my eyes, feel myself shrink, freeze
.

GOD! The whole sick dream’s playing in my head like some warped movie. I can almost feel Tony’s body on mine, pushing me down
.

The worst part is it’s familiar, almost like we — That’s crazy! SHIT! Dad just banged on the wall, yelling, “Lights out!” If he knew what I was writing —

“Oh God. Oh please Dad, no.”

I’m glad I’m in a stall, because suddenly what little tuna I ate makes a return trip. Dropping to my knees just in time, I spray chow into the bowl. I can’t resist examining the murky whirl; I’m a vomit rubbernecker. Tuna bits spin amidst the remains of this morning’s cereal bar. That’s the last time I mix blueberry and albacore.

Contemplating my former stomach contents helps distract me. But then those words — “Tony’s body on mine” — come back, and I heave again. Nothing comes up this time. I flush, resting my forehead on the cool porcelain seat — screw germs! — ’til I’m steady enough to stand.

Exiting the stall, I go straight to the wastebasket and jam the journal in. Shirl was right; some things are better left buried. I unreel a mile of paper towel, wad it, shove it on top.

Just then, Randy Spiotti and crew strut in, cigarettes ready. I find it odd that the track team subsists mainly on beer and carcinogens, but decide not to share that observational nugget.

Pretending to analyze the faded floor tiles, I take a tentative step toward the exit. Despite my valiant stab at invisibility, Randy homes in on me like a geek-seeking missile.

“Hey, Girl-O-Way! What’re you doing hangin’ by the urinals? Looking for a front row seat at the Pecker Parade?”

“Good one, Spiotti!” Tyler Wattrous back slaps Randy; the others erupt in baboon hoots.

“Yeah, good one,” I say, raising my fist for the knuckle-bump that will not come. Quickly abandoning any idea of winning them over, I decide to run for it.

Did I mention they’re the track team? Before my neurotransmitters can fire, they hoist me airborne.

With a gleeful snarl, Randy says, “Flush him.”

Though we’ve just been fairly intimate, I’m not quite ready to become one with the bowl. Pride gone, I screech like a little girl.

As they carry me into the stall, the bathroom door slams open. A whistle screams.

“SPIOTTI!” Coach Novack swears a blue streak and, like an airplane tray-table, I’m returned to an upright position.

“You okay, Galloway?” He cuffs my shoulder with a massive paw.

“I guess so, sir. Thanks.”

“Well, no harm done. No need to report. You know these guys, always horsing around.”

Their thug-to-choirboy transformation complete, the guys are all smiles.

“Sorry, Evan. We were just kiddin’.” Randy offers his hand. I shake; he squeezes. Just hard enough to hurt.

I get to Father B’s class ten minutes late and hand him a pass from Novack. As I slide into my seat next to Alexis, she shoots me a “what happened?” look.

Inside the cover of my notebook, I write: S-H-I-T.

She whispers, “I can see that.”

Father Brendan says, “Miss Bottaro, if you and Mister Galloway would excuse the rest of us, we’d like to get down to business.”

“Sorry, Father.”

“Very well then, today we continue with Chapter 14. Is anyone confused over what you’ve read thus far?”

Stifling a nervous laugh, I think,
If you only knew, Father. If you only knew.

“We can’t go through with this.”

Father B’s class was a pressure cooker. Now we’re headed to art. I’m not looking forward to the creative process. How can I face Pettafordi after what I read?

“Oh, Evan. Don’t go all limp noodle. You know what they say, ‘Cold feet sink ships.’ ”

“Loose lips.”

“Huh?”

“Loose lips. Loose lips sink ships.”

“Right. I knew it sounded funny. What is it they say about cold feet? Cold feet, warm heart? No, that’s not right either.” The cliché soliloquy carries her halfway down the staircase.

“Alexis!”

Noticing me in a heap on the top step, she takes the stairs three at a time and sits next to me, despite the crush of students trying to pass.

“What is it? Are you okay?”

“I can’t talk about it, Lex. I’m just … we’re not meeting Pettafordi. I don’t want to know anymore. It doesn’t matter.”

“What happened? What’d you find out?”

“Move it, Shit Stains!” A group of senior girls mounts the stairs. They’ve no intention of walking around us.

I bolt up the hall, Alexis following. Shaking her off, I bury my face against a row of lockers. Lex knows not to say anything, just embraces me. We stand like that ’til I catch my breath. The hall’s full of gawkers, but I don’t care.

Finally she says, “All right, before we get nailed for public display, we better decide where we’re headed.”

“Let ’em expel me, I don’t give a rat’s ass.”

“Charming sentiment. But I’m not buying the rebel act. Doesn’t suit you. Let me figure this out — Wait! I know the perfect place: cramped, private, nearly soundproof. Follow me.”

She leads me past the cafeteria and auditorium to the music rooms. Slipping into an empty rehearsal cube, we lock the door and sit side by side on a piano bench in the dark.

Alexis taps my forehead with her index finger. “Spill.”

“I told you, I’m through. My father killed himself. Does it matter why?”

“Why always matters, Evan. You deserve the truth.”

“No! The more I discover, the worse I feel. I’m better off not knowing.”

“I used to believe that too, until it almost killed me. You deny the truth long enough, you start to doubt what the truth really is. That’s dangerous — I know.”

I can’t listen to this. I start to get up. Pissed, Lex pulls me back.

“It’s better not to know? Evan, don’t you get it? I won’t let you play the denial game. I was the champ. I convinced the world everything was fine with my stepfather. What’s worse, I made myself believe it. All I knew was, without the game, the ache was real. But thank God, I could never convince you. You made me realize I couldn’t pretend my problems away. You’re the reason I finally told.”

“I know all that. But this is different. What I don’t know hasn’t hurt me so far.”

“Are you sure? Because crying in the hallway seems pretty messed up to me.”

“Screw you!” I jump up and knock over a row of music stands going for the door.

“Oh that’s brilliant. Another solid choice: run away! That’ll solve everything!”

God, I want to hit her. Instead, I launch a pile of sheet music at the wall.

“Okay, you have all the answers, Lex? The truth is so valuable? Fine! You explain how it’s helpful to know … to know … that my father and Mister Pettafordi were — ”

I’m not sure whether I’ve run out of breath or nerve, but I can’t seem to finish the sentence. I pace the cubicle, jaws clenched.

Eventually, Lex breaks the silence. “Your father and Mister P were what?”

“I think Pettafordi’s gay.”

Her bark of laughter makes me jump. “A POSSIBLY GAY ART TEACHER? Earth-shattering! Next you’ll tell me Coach Novack was rejected by MENSA. Or that Father Brendan’s — GASP — Irish! No, seriously, what tipped you off? His passion for all things batik? The way he hums show tunes while showing slides? Because really, Evan, those are just — ”

I almost laugh.

“Will you please shut up? This is serious! I read about him and my dad in the journal, and it sounds like, maybe, they were more than friends.”

“And?”

“And? It’s … I don’t know, gross! He’s my art teacher. My self-appointed mentor, you know? It’s just … wrong. And, and. And wrong.”

“So you said.”

“I’ll tell you one thing. I’m through staying after to help him fire up the freaking kiln!”

“Bold move, Captain. But tell me, do you really think you’ve got a snowball’s chance of avoiding him? Realistically? You’re planning to major in art. He’s your guidance counselor. Are you just going to, like, switch over to shop?”

“I don’t know … but … I guess you’re right. I can’t just pretend none of this has happened.” I sit next to her. “And Lex … I’m sorry I told you to screw.”

“No worries. You’ll pay. Anyway, I know you were just overcompensating, to assert your masculinity. It’s only natural, now that you’ve discovered your dad may have been a Swiss Miss.”

This time I do hit her, a joke shove. She expects it, but mock-falls anyway, sending music stands dominoing. They clatter to the floor; we howl laughter.

Still sprawled in a heap, Lex says, “Look Ev, I really do understand you being upset, but it’s not that big a deal. I mean, it’s not uncommon. I read this article that said something like 63 percent of adolescent males have had at least one same-sex experience, usually with a friend.”

“That’s foul.”

“I realize you’re squarely in the other 37 percent. It’s just, I think you should try not to freak over this.”

“Well, I think
you
ought to reevaluate your reading material. Where’d you see this article anyway?”

“I don’t remember.
Cosmo Girl
,
Scientific American
, something like that. But that’s not the point. All I’m saying is a little youthful experimentation’s not the end of the world.”

“Not to you maybe, but this is my father. And my art teacher. Yish. What am I supposed say to him? How can I even face the guy?”

“Well, you certainly can’t do it alone. I say on with the plan! You, me, Mister P. His office. This afternoon.”

“There’s no way you’re turning this into some … ”

“What?”

I’m at a loss for a clever pop cultural reference; must be nerves. “I don’t know. Just … you’re not invited.”

“Okay, if you want to risk being alone with him. After all, you are a chip off the old block. Might bring back memories, spark ideas about a little like-father-like-son action.”

“You are truly demented.”

“Oh, come on, Evan!”

“No chance.”

She joins me on the bench. “So appealing to your inner homophobe is plainly futile. How about this? Without me you’ve got no witness, with me, a partner in crime.”

She has a point.

“Besides, I really want to be there for you.”

“How selfless. Look, I know you well enough to realize you’ll never take no for an answer, so I’ll give you an extremely qualified yes. You know the condition.”

“Yeah.”

“Say it, Lex.”

“I know, I know: the friggin’ vow. Cripes, are we pirates? Okay. I’ll bolt me lips tighter than Davey Jones’s locker. I’ll take yer secret to me wat’ry grave, if it be yer will. Haargh! Satisfied?”

“You would look utterly cool with an eye patch.”

“Great. Be serious, Ev. If we’re doing this, you need to show me exactly what you read. Where’s the journal? Your locker?”

“Uh … nope.”

“Well, where then? You didn’t leave it in study hall?”

“Not quite … I threw it out.”

“Again, very funny, but we don’t have time for this. We need to decide what to tell Pettafordi. I mean, we should be in class right now. So where’s the journal?”

“Would you believe at the bottom of the barrel? I shoved it in the trash in the third floor boys’ room … Matey.”

“Oh God, you ass. What were you thinking?”

“I wasn’t. I just wanted to get rid of it.”

“Well, I hope you brought your hazmat suit, Cap’n Bonehead. It looks like you’re going diggin’ for treasure.

“Oh man, do you know how nasty that is? We’re talking the
boys’ bathroom
here.”

“At least you won’t have the Sani-Pad Factor to deal with.”

“Okay, now you’ve crossed a line.”

Lex snorts, buries her head against my chest. The cube temperature ratchets up about 15 degrees. Neither of us moves. Then, very slowly, I lift her face. We freeze eye to eye, like levitating ninjas from some action movie.

Even in the gloom, I can see Lex is beet red. I lean in to kiss the face I’ve known forever.

Lex springs up, pops on the lights, hand trembling. Clearing her throat, she says, “It’s time we vacate. These rooms aren’t THAT soundproof, and with the music stands crashing and everything, I’m amazed we haven’t drawn a crowd.”

“I guess you’re right.” Picking up our mess, we avoid eye contact. “Hey, Lex. I, uh … didn’t mean to — ”

“Skip it, Ev. Strange stuff happens in these cubes. Some say they’re haunted by an angry, musical pirate. Maybe he saw the spring production of
Penzance
. That’d explain his mood.”

We laugh. But we both know it’s fake, polite, like laughing at a teacher’s joke. I feel major liberation stepping out of that box, as if I’ve escaped a broken elevator.

We nearly collide with Miss Yee, Lex’s choir teacher, in the hall. She looks suspicious; probably thinks we were making out in the cubicles. We flash an innocent-by-virtue-of-intellect look. Lex makes up an excuse about looking for her lost backpack. Miss Yee lets us slide on by.

Hoping to avoid anyone official, we race through the halls. The days of hall monitors are long gone, but there’s always the chance a wandering nun might materialize, a specter with a detention pad.

Our trip to the third floor’s almost too easy. I take a deep breath — to brace for the smell, as much as to calm my nerves — and step into the bathroom. That’s when I see it: Moriarty’s rolling trash tub. Hesitating, I consider an about-face, but a stall door swings open and, true to my spectacularly bad luck, I’m facing Sebastian’s Guru of Garbage, Alphonse Moriarty III.

There’s no way I can hightail it; too suspicious. I smile. “Hey, Mister Moriarty.”

He gestures with his dripping toilet brush. “Gallagher, right?”

“Gallo
way
, sir. Evan Galloway. How’s it going?”

“Oh, life’s a precious gift, Sir Evan Galloway. I’m having a grand time cleanin’ caked puke off a toilet. Just another fascinating day. Good of you to ask.”

Lacking a chainsaw to cut through the hostility, I just nod, settling on a diversionary urinal visit. Spinning the swing top of the metal basket, as I pass, I glance inside. Empty. Shit! He’s already dumped it into the bin.

I lean into the porcelain alcove pretend-peeing, mind racing. How am I supposed to search his dumpster with him here? Then, sensing movement behind me, I catch a whiff of Spruce-Glo. As his nicotined hand approaches, the skin on the back on my neck migrates skullward.

“I got something you might like.” His voice is low and too close.

I’ve squeezed my eyes shut. Opening them, slowly looking toward him, I pray to every saint I can think of that he’s not exposing himself.

Can I get an Amen? The saints come through. Atop the urinal next to mine, he’s placed my father’s journal.

“Spotted it when I dumped the trash in my bin. You’d be surprised, the stuff I find.”

I just stare from him to the journal and back.

“I went to school with your old man. I was sorry to hear. I mean, we were never friends or nothin’. Still, it’s too bad. Seems like he had a lot to live for.”

Stunned by the oddness of the moment, all I can manage is, “Yup.”

“Look, I’ll be straight with you. I read a few pages, but it seemed like it was gettin’ personal. So I figured I’d save it for when I got home. But I’m glad you come lookin’. You should have it. Anyway, take it slow.”

Moriarty heads away. Holstering his toilet brush to the rolly-tub, he wheels toward the exit. I almost collapse with relief.

At the door he stops and says, “Gallagher! You ought to be more careful with that diary. It’s like his legacy, you know?”

And then, he’s gone. I hear him in the hall, talking to Lex, something about “a nice girl like you in a place like this.”

She says, overloud, “Oh, Alphonse, you slay me!”

I grab the journal off the urinal. It’s no worse for the dumpster dive. Clutching my prize, I realize I really do have to pee. A whole lot. After, at the sink, I catch sight of myself in the mirror. I wink and say, “Buck up, Gallagher. We’ve got work to do.”

Lex and I head toward Pettafordi’s, practically floating through the halls. Just finding the journal whole seems like a good omen.

We tell Mister P the SparkNotes version of the truth: “I got sick on some bad tuna, and Lex stuck with me ’til I felt better.” It flies. We’re pets — though I’m starting to rethink that role. We arrange to meet him later to catch up on what we missed.

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