Henry
“C
ome on, Clara,” I call. “Come on, girl!”
Brent loved this little dog. Clara made his singlehood bearable, he said. I couldn’t bear to think of Clara in the kennel, so I went down and picked her up a couple of days ago. There was no one else to take her.
“That’s a good girl! Come on!”
Clara’s a pug. You know pugs: so ugly they’re cute. Little round jellyrolls, perpetually in motion, with apoplectic eyes over faces defined by twists and folds. I adored her from the moment the lady at the kennel placed her in my arms. I was wearing one of Brent’s shirts. I hoped his scent might comfort her.
It seems only fitting that my first trip with Clara should be to Provincetown. I needed to get out of Boston. The city felt too confining, too dreary, too much of a fuss over nothing. And I wanted to be in Ptown. You know. Because of Brent.
I toss the squeaky rubber bone across the grass. Clara runs after it, yapping wildly, fetching it in her mouth and bringing it back to me. I wrest it from her teeth and throw it again. She makes another manic dash across the lawn. When she comes shooting back at me, a furry little cannonball, I roll onto the ground, my arms and legs in the air, and let her climb on top of me. She loves it when I do that. She drops the bone onto my chest and licks me all over my face.
“That’s my girl,” I laugh. “That’s my baby girl!”
A couple of the other guests at Nirvana are passing through the yard. They stop to comment on how cute Clara is. I grin and accept their praise on her behalf. Brent was right. Having a dog does make you popular.
Everyone
stops to chat.
Lloyd has been great, refusing to charge me for my room, even though I insisted that wasn’t necessary. Except maybe it is. Remember that promotion I was up for? Well, I didn’t get it. They gave it to some woman who had less seniority than me but apparently better connections. All those years slaving dutifully away in my cubicle suddenly feel wasted. So money remains tight. And it’s been some months now since Hank has contributed anything to the household income.
The sun is dropping lower in the sky. Out on the street I watch as a gaggle of boys heads toward Tea Dance, chatting animatedly like boys do on the streets of Provincetown, all hands and eyes. I recognize them as Boston boys. The same old tired faces. One waves over at me. I manage a smile.
I’m not planning on joining them. Instead of the bars and the beach, I’ve spent my time walking with Clara through Beech Forest and sitting out on the stones in the East End, as far from the crowds as I can get. It’s a different Provincetown, one far removed from the throbbing beat of the Crown and Anchor and the “see-me, see-you” crowds at Spiritus. It’s a Provincetown I didn’t know was available during the height of summer, but Lloyd has revealed it to me.
“There’s so much here that so many never see,” he explained. I followed him out on my bike to the other side of Route 6, where we hiked up into the dunes, the place where the artists lived in their shacks and where the vast horizon of sand looks like the Sahara Desert. It was the first time I’d ever really spent any time alone with Lloyd, and I found his slower, easier, more spiritual energy so different from Jeff. So refreshing. It’s been just what I needed, just what I’d been looking for on this trip.
Lloyd has come out onto, the porch now and is watching Clara and me wrestle on the lawn.
“You two want to take a walk on the beach?” he calls over to us.
“Sure!” I stand, clapping my hands as Clara trots alongside me. “Come on, Clara! Come on, girl!”
I spot Eva coming out of the house behind Lloyd. “Did I hear you boys say you’re heading to the beach? I’m finished with the work here, so maybe I’ll—”
I watch as Lloyd shoots her a look. It’s a look that surprises me in its intensity. “We’ve talked about this, Eva,” Lloyd says. His voice seems hard, definitive.
Her face crumbles. “Right,” she says, trying to smile. “I’ll watch the house.”
Lloyd is already down the steps and crossing Commercial Street. I can’t help but keep my eyes on Eva. It looks as if she might cry. Then suddenly her expression changes: it’s almost scary, like Madame Jekyll and Sister Hyde. Something twists, and she looks furious. She seems not to know I’m watching her. She turns and goes back inside the house.
Something has definitely gone down between Eva and Lloyd. I don’t know what it is, but it must have been something
fierce
.
“Lloyd!” I call. “Wait up!”
Clara and I follow him onto the beach. The little dog keeps running up to the edge of the waves, backing off when they come in too close.
I catch up with Lloyd. “You seem to be keeping Eva at arm’s length,” I observe.
He sighs. “Yes. I suppose I seemed a little harsh back there.”
“Actually, yeah.”
“It’s not easy,” he says. “I keep wanting to melt, to give in. But I have to be firm, Henry. Otherwise everything will collapse.”
“Wow,” I say. “That sounds pretty dramatic.” I try to smile. “Letting her walk with us along the beach wouldn’t have been a problem.”
He shoots me a look almost as ferocious as the one he gave her. “You think not? Then she would have wanted to cook us dinner. Then we’d have all sat around and she would gotten you talking about Brent. Then she would have told you about Steven. Then she’d be in bed with you. Give her an inch and she takes a mile.”
I make a face. “Lloyd, you’re exaggerating a little.”
He relaxes. “Maybe. But trust me, Henry. I’ve learned some stuff.... Believe me, this is the only way for now. It’s called
tough love
. Eva has some problems she has to deal with. I’ve told her the only way I can see us continuing with this business is for her to be in therapy. I’ve asked her to start making some friends of her own. She can’t always be tagging along with me.”
I shrug. “She’s always been very sweet to me.”
“There comes a time when the mother bird has to kick the babies out of the nest.” He smiles. “I’m coming across hard, I know, but it’s the only way. I can’t go on enabling her. She needs to prove she can do the work.”
“Well, I trust your judgment, Lloyd,” I tell him. “I figure you know best.”
You see, I’ve come to view Lloyd as a wise man. No matter what we’ve talked about, he’s been able to offer ideas and counsel I never would have thought of on my own. If he believes “tough love” is needed for Eva, who am I to question him?
We’re quiet for a while, watching Clara play chicken with the tide. She seems fascinated by its possibilities, but terrified of actually finding them out.
“Jeff’s been trying to reach you,” Lloyd says all at once, just as Clara gets her paws wet and yelps out loud, running back to me as fast as her little legs can take her.
I pick her up. “Yes,” I say. “I got his messages.”
“I know he wanted to connect with you when he heard about Brent.”
I sigh. “Yeah. I’ll call him when I get back to Boston.”
Lloyd levels his eyes at me. “Henry, I don’t really understand the problem between you and Jeff, but I know he really cares about you. He really wants to know that you’re doing okay with this.”
I laugh, a little too harshly. “Doing okay? What’s that supposed to mean?”
Lloyd picks up a stone and tosses it into the waves. Clara wants to leap out of my arms to go after it, but I hold her tight.
“We’ve talked about everything in the last twenty-four hours except the reason you came down here,” Lloyd says, turning to look at me. “Do you want to talk about Brent?”
“I . . . I don’t know what I’d say.”
He looks over at me with the kindest, softest eyes I think I’ve ever seen. “Was anyone with you when you got the news that Brent died?”
There are those words again:
Brent died
. I’ve heard them over and over, of course, for several days. I’ve even said them, giving the news to friends and acquaintances throughout the South End. But still they seem so strange, foreign, ridiculously unreal. Brent. Silly, spirited, ubiquitous Brent. He turns up everywhere, annoying the shit out of everyone. How can he be dead?
I set Clara down. She runs around in circles a couple of times before deciding to check out the waves again. “I called Shane,” I tell Lloyd, “and he came over.”
Lloyd smiles. “Good old Shane.”
“Yeah,” I agree. “Good old Shane.”
He came right over after I called, bearing Chinese food and two bottles of wine: one red, one white. He forced me to eat the sweet-and-sour pork (if Mother only knew), and then we consumed both bottles of wine. Even though we didn’t talk much, just ate and drank, it felt good to have him there. Just somebody else in my apartment who was living, breathing. Of course he spent the night. We didn’t have sex, but he held me, and feeling Shane’s warm body next to mine all night was comforting.
“Too bad Brent’s parents didn’t allow a memorial service,” Lloyd says. “It might have offered closure.”
“Yeah.” Brent’s body was whisked out of Boston and taken back to Providence for whatever burial ceremony the Whiteheads had in mind. All trace of him was simply gone from our lives.
“You could still organize something,” Lloyd suggests. “Arrange a memorial service on your own. Get Brent’s friends together . . .”
“He had no friends,” I say. “No one really knew Brent. Or liked him very much.”
I watch Clara bark at a flock of seagulls. How much life in that little body. How much spirit.
“I guess I never realized you and Brent were all that close,” Lloyd says.
“We weren’t. That’s what’s so weird about all this. For most of the time I knew him, Brent bugged the shit out of me. He was flighty, self-centered, and could be nasty as shit. But . . .”
Lloyd looks at me. “But . . . ?”
“He was my friend,” I say simply.
Lloyd just nods.
I hesitate a minute, then speak again. “Brent had HIV,” I tell Lloyd.
He’s stunned.
I look off at the bay. “His mother told me. Apparently, she hadn’t known, either. She was angry. She found me in his apartment, clearing out his porno collection. I was doing it for her, really, so she wouldn’t have to see it. But she was pissed. Accused me of giving it to him.”
“Oh, God, Henry.” Lloyd takes my hand. “Did Brent know
himself?”
I feel the tears burn behind my eyes. “I have no idea. Whether he was on the cocktails or not, he never told me.”
“Jesus,” Lloyd says.
I think of Brent’s body, so full, so pumped, that trace of acne across his back. I don’t want to cry. Not again. I fight back the tears.
“I can only think that all his partying was an escape of some sort. He did tell me he had a lover who died of AIDS. Right before he died, he told me that.” I look over at Lloyd. “Do you know Brent once said that dying of AIDS was preferable than ending up an old, lonely queen? He didn’t want to turn into some irrelevant old-timer whose only role was as background chorus to a group of kids. He wanted to go out while he was still on top.” I shake my fist up at the sky. “Well, you got your wish, you asshole!”
Lloyd slips his arm around my shoulder.
“I don’t want people to remember Brent just as some drugged-out party boy.” I laugh ruefully. “Even though that’s what he was. But he wanted what we all want. To find somebody. To fall in love.” I look at Lloyd and finally start blubbering.
Lloyd just pulls me closer to him.
“Before I came down here,” I say, wiping my nose with the back of my hand, “I went for an HIV test.”
Lloyd lifts my chin. God, his eyes are beautiful. “Have you been putting yourself at risk?” he asks.
I laugh. “Lloyd, I’ve been a goddamn
escort.
And not once did I ever think about AIDS.”
Lloyd doesn’t know what to say.
“Oh, sure. I thought of it in the abstract. I told clients I only practiced safe sex. If I guy asked me to bareback, I refused. So, no, I wasn’t really at risk. But it struck me, finding out about Brent, how I never really gave that much thought to AIDS—how nobody seems to, really. How so many in the circuit scene don’t ever talk about it. Everybody pretends that it’s over, that it doesn’t exist.”
“And yet, as Brent proves, it’s still there.” Lloyd looks off at the waves. “How many guys out on the dance floor have HIV and either don’t know or don’t tell?”
“I get my results when I go back to Boston.” I look at Lloyd and I’m sure the terror on my face is obvious. “I’ve never been tested before in my life.”
Lloyd sighs. “What a difference a few years make. There was a time when everyone I knew was tested two, three, or more times.”
I look down at Clara, who’s sniffing around the dried shell of a dead crab. “I don’t know anybody with AIDS,” I tell Lloyd. “I’ve never lost anyone.”
Lloyd looks suddenly as if he might cry, too. I know he’s thinking about Javitz. He takes my hands and eases me down beside him on an old log. He kicks off his sandals and pushes his toes into the hot sand.