Read My Most Excellent Year Online
Authors: Steve Kluger
Dear Mama,
I wish somebody could have told me how many invisible land mines there are when you make friends with a little kid. Because if I knew that up front, maybe I wouldn’t be doing such a ginky job.
Hucky spent the weekend at our house. Since it was his first sleepover ever, Pop and I decided we were going to make it a special one, but when we saw him waiting for us on the Institute porch—carrying his stuffed dog Shut-the-Door and a suitcase so small you wouldn’t figure anything could fit inside—it sort of hit me like a
punch in the stomach that he looked really little and really scared.
That’s me when I was six. I remember how afraid I was to spend a weekend with Aunt Babe once it was just me and Pop. What was
that
all about?
The good news is that Hucky is a whole lot braver than I was, and if he really had cold feet, he didn’t show them for long. As a matter of fact, he got a handle on the whole sleepover routine in about a minute and a half.
If it had ended there, it would have been one of the better days of my year. But around 2:30 in the morning—right in the middle of a dream about Augie playing left field for the White Sox—it got really cold at Comiskey Park. That was because Nehi had pulled off all my blankets and sheets while he was poking his nose into my neck like he always does when it’s time for me to get up for school. But now he was also yanking on my sleeve too, and by the time I woke up enough to figure out it was still dark, I was also awake enough to hear Hucky crying. It wasn’t very loud and it almost sounded like coughing—but it got me up on my feet pretty fast anyway. Nehi had already jumped back onto Hucky’s bed and begun pacing back and forth like he was saying “
Do
something!” Do
what
? Mama, his hands were clenched into two little fists and his whole body was scrunched up and shaking like a catcher who’s just been really badly hurt—but he was still sound asleep. So I couldn’t even laugh him out of it the way you used to do whenever I had a bad dream. The only thing I could think of was to wrap his arms back around Shut-the-Door and then sit on the edge of his bed and keep patting his head to see if it made a difference.
T.C., you’re SO out of your league here! Get Pop. Call Mrs. Jordan. Anybody who knows what they’re doing!
It felt
like we were there for most of the night, but the sobbing finally got quieter and quieter until it stopped completely—and Nehi even lay back down, keeping one eye open like he was still at Orange Alert. I guess I didn’t fix what was broken, but it was the best I could come up with in the middle of the night. And any hoser probably could have done better.
Mama, I
really
need some help here.
I love you,
T.C.
www.augiehwong.com
PRIVATE CHAT
AlePerez:
How many times did it happen?
TCKeller:
Three. I finally got the idea to fall asleep next to him and Nehi so he wouldn’t be left alone. It worked. At least he didn’t cry anymore.
AugieHwong:
He could have been homesick. Sometimes you do that when you’re little and in a strange bed.
TCKeller:
Or maybe it happens all the time, but since Mateo’s deaf and can’t hear him, nobody knows about it.
AugieHwong:
Please don’t go there. It reminds me of you when we were seven.
TCKeller:
I cried in my sleep??
AugieHwong:
All the nights I stayed over you did. I never felt so clueless in my life.
AlePerez:
Maybe Hucky misses his mother too.
TCKeller:
How? He never knew her.
AugieHwong:
No, it’s the Mary Poppins thing. He really thinks she’s going to rescue him. Tick, remember his face when Aunt Babe bought him the picture from the movie?
TCKeller:
That’s what I thought. So I tried to hint that maybe she’s too busy with kids in England to come to Brookline but—
AlePerez:
Anthony, you can’t do that. She’s all he’s got.
AugieHwong:
Yeah, but we also can’t let him think that she’s really going to float down in the middle of Commonwealth Avenue. That’s not fair either.
TCKeller:
I know, I know. The only person who’s going to convince him that Mary Poppins isn’t coming to stay with him is Mary Poppins.
AlePerez:
You lost me.
TCKeller:
Aug, how much do you know about Julie Andrews?
AugieHwong:
Real name Julia Elizabeth Wells, born October 1, 1935 with a five-octave range, loves kids, has three of her own, wrote a couple of children’s books, and incidentally knows the British version of
American Sign Language (assuming that’s what she was doing with her hands while she was singing “My Favorite Things” on the Tony Awards). Why?
TCKeller:
Look, I know she’s famous and all, but if we FedEx her a letter and tell her about Hucky, she’s
got
to write him back, doesn’t she?
AugieHwong:
First of all, where are we going to find her? You can’t send something like that to an agent and think they’re going to forward it. I know. I tried writing to Anne Bancroft that way. Six times. I kept getting form letters from the Creative Artists Agency and one of them included an autographed picture of Candice Bergen.
AlePerez:
I can get Julie Andrews’s home address from the Secret Service. But I’ll need a day.
TCKeller:
You’re kidding, right?
AugieHwong:
No, she’s not. I’ve seen her Outlook Address Book. She’s got the FBI in there too.
AlePerez:
Who’s going to write it?
TCKeller:
We all are. I don’t do well with letters to famous people unless they have batting averages.
L
AURENTS
S
CHOOL
B
ROOKLINE
, M
ASSACHUSETTS
VIA E-MAIL
Dear Ted:
Floor-level Celtics seats are the private property of the people who own them, even when they don’t show up. Sneaking downstairs at halftime and sitting in the empty ones is no different than breaking into a neighbor’s house to use the swimming pool while the neighbors are out of town. See if you can finger-spell M-I-S-D-E-M-E-A-N-O-R. We should have been arrested.
As of this morning, I have half a faculty and an entire ninth grade at various stages of proficiency in American Sign Language—and it’s not even on the curriculum. The teachers don’t have a choice. Learning it is the only way they can figure out what the kids are saying.
Clayton Landey claims that he’s never seen anybody pick up ASL as quickly as Anthony has, which probably accounts for the overall change in his grades. Including yesterday’s algebra quiz, his GPA is 98. Evidently, American Sign Language drains all of the energy necessary to keep the lid on a B+ average. Please don’t say “I told you so.” Just because you wear “stubborn” well doesn’t mean you’d look good in “smug.”
Lori
K
ELLER
C
ONSTRUCTION
BOSTON • GLOUCESTER • WALTHAM
ELECTRONIC TRANSMISSION
Dear Lori:
I never attained enough emotional maturity to graduate to the level of smug. The best I can do is “nyah, nyah.”
Sneaking downstairs into the expensive seats is a tradition as old as the seventh-inning stretch, Fenway Franks, and tossing out the first pitch on Opening Day. Not only is it an accepted fact of life, it’s considered unpatriotic not to make the effort. Get used to it.
Craig, Wei, and I are taking the kids skiing in Vermont from December 26–30. (“The kids” is a category that hereafter includes Hucky, now that I’ve been deemed morally competent by the Commonwealth of Mass-achusetts.) We’re staying at the Briar Hearth Inn in Woodford, and due to an unexplained mathematical brain fart, I somehow managed to book an extra room by mistake. Gee, it’d be a shame to waste it. “Kids, look who’s staying at our hotel!” What could be more credible?
Ted
Dear Angie,
Remember when you started rehearsals for
Mame
and you discovered muscles that hadn’t been invented yet? Because I have one in my left butt that even scientists couldn’t know about.
In
Kiss Me, Kate
I play a scoundrel who loves Lois (Lee Meyerhoff) but who can’t stop gambling—so in between dances, he’s dodging mobsters and getting everybody else into trouble right along with him. It’s definitely a stretch for me. I mean, the kids are so used to my Katharine Hepburn, they never knew what kind of a range I had before.
But the star of the show is definitely Alé. When Mrs. Packer blocked her in “Wunderbar” and “So in Love With You Am I,” me and Andy and the rest of the cast just sat on the edge of the stage to watch and listen. (We found out later that you could hear her as far away as the cafeteria, which is why about thirty civilians snuck into the back of the auditorium for a closer look too.) She has the kind of smoky voice that’s part Lena Horne, part Juanita Hall, and the rest of it like nobody you ever heard before in your life. And she knows how to sell “hot.” Tick had better move fast before the competition drowns him. And speaking of drowning, I qualified as a near-fatality at swim practice this afternoon. Tick was butterflying in the lane next to me, but I got assigned a half a lap behind Andy. Imagine the view every time I looked up. I accidentally discovered that it’s not a good idea to hyperventilate in eight feet of chlorinated water.