Twerp (15 page)

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Authors: Mark Goldblatt

BOOK: Twerp
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“I don’t think sitting at my desk is going to—”

“No, it’s working,” she said. “Now I see things the way you see them.”

“What do you mean?”

“Now I see how beautiful Beverly Segal is.”

“You think I think Beverly Segal is beautiful?”

“Why else would you buddy up with her?”

“Beverly is from the block. She and I have been friends for years.”

That was when Jillian’s eyes welled up. “So she’s your girlfriend?”

“No, she’s not my girlfriend!”

She brushed away her tears with the palms of her hands, then said in a low voice, almost a whisper, “Why do you hate me, Julian? I don’t understand. What did I do wrong?”

I glanced from side to side as she spoke. The room was still filling up. There were about a dozen conversations going on, so no one was paying attention to Jillian and me. But that wasn’t going to last much longer.

“You didn’t do a thing wrong,” I said.

“Then why don’t you like me anymore?”

“Anymore?”

“Lots of guys think
I’m
beautiful,” she said.

“I don’t like
anyone
, Jillian.”

“But you wrote me a love letter,” she said.

“I told you—the letter wasn’t from me.”

“But it sounds like you. I can hear your voice. I can hear your
heart
.”

“Maybe I helped to write it—”

She looked up at me hopefully.

“Here’s the thing, Jillian. If I were going to write a letter like that for myself, you’re the one I’d write it to for sure. I think you’re real pretty, and I also think you’re real smart. So maybe, when I was helping to write it, I got carried away. But the letter isn’t mine. It’s not
from
me. It wasn’t my idea.”

“But it was your words?”

“Yes,” I said.

“And your feelings too?”

“Look,” I said, “if I tell you the truth, do you swear to keep it between us?”

“Of course I do!”

“Do you swear?”

She looked me dead in the eyes. “I would
never
tell your secrets, Julian.”

I inhaled. “You know my friend Lonnie?”

“Sure, the one who came to my barbecue.”

“Yeah. He’s a great guy.”

She half shrugged and brushed away a tear. “He’s all right, I guess.”

“He’s not just all right. He’s a
great
guy. He’s smarter than anyone I know. Maybe it doesn’t always show in school, but once you get to know him, you realize how smart he is. I mean, he’s just an all-around great guy.”

She got a sudden look on her face, like she’d just figured things out. “Did Lonnie tell you not to like me anymore?”

“What?”

“I got mad at him when he was talking about his mother. Did I hurt his feelings? I didn’t mean to do it. I don’t mind apologizing if I hurt his feelings. It’s just that … how could you talk about your mother that way?”

“First of all, Lonnie loves his mother—”

“I’ll tell him I’m sorry. I don’t mind.”

“That’s just his way of joking around.”

“I want to be friends with your friends.”

“Second of all, Lonnie’s not just my friend. He’s my
best
friend. He’s the greatest guy I know. It’s not just me who thinks that. You could ask any guy on Thirty-Fourth Avenue who the greatest guy he knows is, and the answer will come up the same every time. It’s Lonnie.”

“I know you’re loyal to your friends, Julian. I’ll apologize to Lonnie the next time I see him.”

I felt defeat wash over me. “Jillian, it was
Lonnie’s
letter.”

She lurched back and put her hand over her mouth.

“I wrote it for him. But only because he asked me to do it.”

“How
could
you, Julian?” Tears flooded back to her eyes.

“I thought it was a bad idea. That’s the honest truth. But I did it because Lonnie is a great guy, and I knew he would do it for me.”

“Why would you need Lonnie to write a letter for you?”

“I wouldn’t,” I said. “But let’s say I needed to drag a couch down the street—”

“What?”

“I know it’s a bad example. But let’s say I did—”

She let out a loud sob. The entire class turned toward us. It was like that scene in the movie
Children of the Damned
where the kids’ heads spin around all at once. Jillian lowered her face into her hands and cried, and I stood next to her, with my hands in my pockets, waiting for her to get up out of my seat.

After several seconds, I whispered, “I’m sorry.”

“It’s all right, Julian,” she managed to answer.

“I like you a lot.”

“You don’t have to say that.”

“No, it’s the truth,” I said. “If Lonnie hadn’t thought of it first, I would’ve written the letter myself.”

She looked up at me. “Really?”

“I mean, I can’t say for sure—”

“But you do like me a lot.”

“Yes, but so does Lonnie. He’s
crazy
about you. If you just got to know him—”

She stood up and wiped the tears from her eyes. “All right, I understand, Julian.”

The way she said that sent a chill through me. But there was no way to continue the conversation. She walked back to her desk, and I slid in behind mine. I kept my head down until I could feel the rest of the kids lose interest. They went back to their conversations. Five minutes later, the morning bell rang, and class started.

May 9, 1969

When They Get Started …

You know that short story we read
the other day, “My Old Man” by Ernest Hemingway? I didn’t think too much of it at the time. It seemed like one of those stories that goes on and on and then stops, and afterward you wonder why you had to read it in the first place. It’s sad, I guess, how the kid’s dad gets knocked off the racehorse and killed, and then the horse has to be killed too. Actually, now that I’m writing about it, it’s
real
sad—even if the kid’s dad was a crook. I mean, no kid should have to see his dad get killed. It kind of choked me up just now, thinking back on it. (Don’t worry, I’m not going to bawl.) But what stuck in my head was the last line: “Seems like when they get started they don’t leave a guy nothing.”

That’s just how I feel after last week.

First came a note from Lonnie, which Quentin handed to me at the bus stop on Tuesday morning.

Dear Julian
,

I know I don’t write so good as you and I might make mistakes with where commas and punctuations go and such. But I’m writing to say I saw you kissing with Jillian last week in the cafeteria but I tried to act like it was nothing but yesterday she said you told her to tell me she liked you and not me. I think that stinks Julian. I trusted you because you were my friend but you stabbed me right in the back like it was nothing. I ought to punch you but I won’t on account of how long we were friends but I don’t want to talk to you no more from now on
.

Sincerely, your x-friend Lonnie

Lonnie’s note, like I said, came on Tuesday morning, and it just tore me up. Looking back, though, things went downhill from there. I could have handled the note by itself. I’m sure if nothing else had happened, Lonnie and I would’ve talked things out. The thing about Lonnie is that he’s fair, and the truth was that he had no reason to be mad at me.

That’s what I was going to tell him after school on Tuesday. It had to be after school because I couldn’t walk up to him in the cafeteria, when the rest of the guys were around. No one besides me knew how he felt about Jillian, and I wanted to respect his privacy. So I waited until after school—I figured Lonnie would be as torn up as I was about what had happened, and I knew that when he felt like that, he liked to walk home by himself.

I let him have a five-minute head start, and then I ran a couple of blocks until he came into sight. He was walking up 149th Street, about to turn the corner at Bayside Avenue. I jogged up behind him. His shoulders were hunched forward. He looked wrecked and miserable even from behind, which was just what I expected. He turned when he heard my footsteps.

“Wait up!” I called to him.

He stopped and shook his head. The look on his face was more sad than mad.

“I don’t want to talk to you, Julian,” he said.

“C’mon, Lonnie,” I said. “Just hear me out.”

That was the last sentence I got out before Howie Wartnose tackled me. I had no idea he was there. It turned out Quentin and Howie were walking about ten steps ahead of Lonnie. They’d just turned the corner, so I hadn’t noticed them when I ran up behind him. I felt myself tumbling backward onto the front lawn of a house, with
Howie riding me down, and then I felt his full weight on my chest.

Now would be a good time to mention that I’ve never been in an actual fight. I know that sounds strange, but it’s the truth. I don’t think I have the personality for it. I get mad sometimes, for sure, like when I chased after Eduardo in the playground. But I was just going to tag him hard, not fight with him. What I mean is, when I do get mad, it’s always an annoyed kind of mad, not a bug-eyed kind of mad. Lonnie even teases me about it … like, one time we were watching a couple of junior high school guys going at it on Union Street, and he nudged me with his elbow and said, “Why don’t you jump in there, Jules?”

That’s not to say I’ve never wrestled around with guys in a jokey kind of way, and for a second that’s what I thought was going on when I felt Howie straddling me. It was only when I looked up and saw his eyes bugging out that I realized he was serious.

“Why’d you do it?” he yelled. But at the same time he yelled the words, he also started to drool. I noticed a droplet of drool form at the corner of his mouth, and I knew it was going to fall into my face. I twisted my head to the left just as it came loose. It must have missed me by an inch. “Don’t you move!” Howie yelled. “Don’t you move a muscle!”

The drool was gone when I looked back up. I eased back my shoulders and waited to hear him out.

As soon as he felt me relax, his eyes changed. It was slight but noticeable. The anger was still there, but there was hurt mixed in with it. “Why did you do it, Julian?”

“Do what?”

“You know what!”

“I don’t, Howie.”

“Why did you kiss Beverly?”

“What are you talking about?”

“You kissed her at the museum!”

“I didn’t kiss her at the museum!”

“Then where did you kiss her?”

“Nowhere,” I said. “I didn’t kiss her.”

“Then how come it’s all over school?”

“I don’t know.”

“Tell the truth!”

“I’m
telling
you the truth, Howie. I buddied up with her at the museum because she didn’t want to be stuck with Hank Feltscher. That’s it. I don’t know what you heard, but that’s the truth. If you would’ve just asked me instead of getting weird about it, I would’ve told you.”

“Let him up,” Lonnie said.

Howie glanced back over his shoulder at Lonnie. “He’s lying.”

“He’s not lying. Let him up.”

Howie looked back down at me. “If I let you up, are you going to run away?”

I smiled up at him. “If I think you’re going to hit me, I’m going to run away.”

“You see!”

“Let him up!” Lonnie grabbed Howie by the shoulder and pulled him off me.

As soon as I felt his weight come off, I sat up but didn’t stand. I looked him in the eye and said, “Howie, there’s nothing between me and Beverly.”

“Why should I trust you?”

“Because it’s the truth,” I said. “There’s nothing between me and Beverly … 
and there’s nothing between you and Beverly
. I’m telling you the truth for your own good. This thing with her has been going on for too long. You’ve got to let it go. She doesn’t want to be your girlfriend. That’s not going to change.”

“How do you know?”

I took a deep breath. “
Everyone
knows.”

When I said that, I watched the light in his eyes go out. The anger went away. Even the hurt went away. There was nothing left except the glaze on the surface. He looked killed.

“I’m real sorry, Howie.”

He ignored me and turned to Lonnie, which made
sense. That’s who I’d want to hear it from if I were in his position.

“Is it true?” he said.

Lonnie exhaled. “What do you want me to say?”

“Just tell me if it’s true.”

“Yeah, Howie, it’s true.”

He said it quick and direct, like pulling off a Band-Aid.

Howie swallowed hard and turned to Quentin, his last hope. Quentin had his head down at first and wouldn’t meet his eyes, but then he glanced up and nodded.

“Why didn’t you tell me?”

He was still looking at Quentin, but he meant the question for all of us. I wanted to answer him, but I couldn’t find the right words. There were no right words. There was no excuse. We
should’ve
told him. For his own sake and for Beverly’s sake. We knew the thing was hopeless, but none of us said a word. Except behind his back. He was our friend, he was one of us, but we laughed about him and Beverly behind his back.

He spun around again and faced Lonnie. “Why didn’t
you
tell me?”

Lonnie said, “Because guys don’t take away other guys’ dreams.”

As he said that, he was staring straight at me.

Howie lowered his head and muttered, “You’re not true friends.”

“Yes, we are,” Lonnie said. I thought he was going to say more, but that was all he had. There was a real painful silence afterward.

“Then how come you didn’t tell me?”

“No one thought it would go on so long.”

Howie turned and started up the sidewalk by himself. It was pathetic to watch. He wasn’t quite running, but he was rushing to get away from us, with his shoulders slumped forward and his head hanging low. It was so pathetic that I wished I’d never opened my mouth. Quentin took a step after him, but Lonnie caught him by the arm. “Let him walk it off.”

“He’ll be all right,” I said, standing up. “He just needs a little time.”

“A
little
time?” Lonnie said. “Is that what you think?”

“He needs time to get over it. I don’t know how much.”

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