Jeff
O
nce, years ago, I met an old man on this beach. A painter who taught me a little lesson about life. About how precious it is, how mysterious. How it can sneak around from behind and surprise you, catch up with you and make you rethink everything you’ve ever believed. “After living on the same beach for thirty years,” the old painter told me, “watching the seasons come and the seasons go, watching the gulls eat the sand crabs and the cats eat the gulls, there’s only one thing I don’t believe in anymore.” His rheumy old eyes tried to focus on mine. “And that’s
coincidence.”
It was no coincidence that I’d met that old painter that day, just when I needed him most, and no coincidence that I’ve come to this same place again today. Somehow I
knew
to come here, out along the beach at low tide, strewn with seaweed, the sky sharp and blue. There’s a bite to the wind, a promise of winter. They’re predicting more snow this week. How fast winter has come around again.
I knew somehow I’d find him here. He’s walking ahead of me, his hands thrust deep into the pockets of the leather coat I’d bought him, his backpack slung over his shoulder. It’s no coincidence that I knew to come here, just as it had been no random meeting that night on the dance floor last New Year’s Eve. There was
purpose
in my discovery of Anthony, in his finding of me, in the love that developed between us.
He turns, as if expecting me.
We say nothing at first. He still looks the same. Why would I think he’d look any different? He still has that glow to his skin, a tan that hasn’t faded. His eyes are still soft and blue, wide and entreating. He has the same majestic taper to his torso, the same broad shoulders and the same gait to his walk. But still, he’s different. As much as I hoped he wouldn’t be, he is.
“I can tell by your face that you know the truth,” he says at last.
I struggle to find my voice. “I only know facts. What I don’t know are feelings, Brian.”
He makes no reaction to hearing me call him by his real name. He offers neither confirmation nor denial, but there’s no point, really. The truth is now plain. He’s no roommate of Robert Riley, no lover or son of a lover. He’s the man who killed Robert Riley. Or rather, the boy.
“What is it you want to know?” he asks at last.
“Tell me why you took Anthony Sabe’s name.”
He doesn’t respond right away. He just gazes back over the sea, the waves crashing only a few inches from his feet.
“I’m not sure,” he says finally. “Maybe because I wanted him to live.”
I watch as he slips off his backpack and unzips the front pouch. He withdraws a folded sheet of yellow legal paper and hands it to me.
“What is this?” I ask.
“Read it.”
I open it. It’s a handwritten letter, dated November 30, 1994. Almost exactly six years ago. It’s written in scrawled blue ink that has smudged in places. The paper is crinkled, a sign of being well read, and it’s signed “Anthony.” I know without inquiry that its author is Anthony Sabe—the
real
Anthony Sabe, not the boy who lived with me all those months, but Anthony Sabe, the lover of Robert Riley, who’d died of AIDS. And it was written only about a month before his death.
Dear Brian,
I’ve read your letter over and over again. I have it beside me, where I can see it. Thank you for it.
You have your whole life ahead of you, Brian. Someday you will be free and I hope you will remember all I’ve told you. Don’t set limitations on yourself, or on those you love, because you’re always going to surpass them. Don’t let others tell you how or what you’re supposed to be. Be true to yourself and to nobody else. Be who you are.
There are not enough words to describe how we are to be fully human, Brian. Remember that, and you will always be free.
Anthony
I look up at him. I recognize the words. He had spoken them to me, that first day, on Ninth Avenue, when my heart had first melted toward him. I know right away they’re words he’s memorized, words he lives by, words he repeats to himself every day.
“I wrote to him from prison,” Brian Murphy explains, looking again out over the waves. “I wrote to him to ask his forgiveness. For killing Robert. For all I’d done that night.” His voice tightens. “That horrible night.”
“And . . . he did? He forgave you?”
“Yes.
He forgave me.”
The tears are silently running down his cheeks. “We wrote back arid forth for a few months.” His voice trails off. “Then he died, too.”
I try to focus my gaze on him but find it difficult. I’ve known the truth ever since my trip to Hartford, but now, facing him, hearing him speak it is devastating. His confession keeps coming back to me. “
I tackled him to the ground. I punched him in the head and told him to shut up.”
“Anthony Sabe forgave you,” I repeat, more to myself than to him.
He looks at me boldly. “Is that such a radical notion for you, Jeff? Yes, he forgave me for killing his lover. For taking the one man he’d ever loved, the one man he’d hoped to spend the rest of his life with, the one man who should have been there, taking care of him as he grew sick and died.” His jaw quivers as the tears come harder and faster. “
He forgave me
. And he left me these words, the words that finally gave me the courage to face who I am,
what
I am, and why I did what I did.”
I can’t say anything.
“And you can tell Mrs. Riley he forgave her, too.”
He takes the letter from my hand and replaces it in his backpack.
“It was always here, Jeff,” he says, a little bitterly. “You could have found it anytime. Just unzipped my backpack while I slept.”
I’ve started to cry, too. “Please. You’ve got to understand that I only wanted to find out the truth because I cared about you.”
He shrugs. “Maybe, in the beginning. But I became a story to you. An investigation that got your blood pumping again after so long.”
“No, Anth—no.” I can’t talk. I can’t make words.
He looks at me with hard eyes. “Aren’t you pleased with yourself? You took my challenge and you met it. You’re still the same old good reporter you’ve always been. Isn’t that what you wanted? You finally know the truth.”
“No,” I say. “I don’t know the truth. There’s still so much I don’t know.”
“What details are left outstanding?” he asks, a sarcastic, angry kid I don’t recognize. “What more do you still want to know?”
“Please,” I say, trying to take his hands, but he pulls back.
“Twelve years
, Jeff. Twelve years I sat in prison. Do you know how
long
that is? What were you doing for those twelve years, Jeff? It encompasses your whole time with Lloyd, doesn’t it? In those twelve years, you met Javitz, you loved him, and he died. All the while I sat in prison.”
I just stare at him, unable to speak.
“And yet it’s no time at all, really, not when you figure Robert’s never coming back. But it was long enough for me to think about why I was there. Why my youth had been taken from me. No—why I’d thrown it away. Why I had no family, no true friends.”
He picks up a stone and tosses it out onto the waves. “And I came to accept the fact that what they’d implied about me in court was true. I was homosexual. I was acting out my repressed feelings when I went with Frankie and the others down to the Chez Est to beat up gay guys.”
I seize a thought. “It was
Frankie
who was the ringleader.
He
was the instigator.”
“If you need to believe that, Jeff, go ahead.” He smiles sadly. “Sure, Frankie was the one we all looked up to. He was the coolest. But I can’t back off from my own responsibility. I was there. I could’ve said no. I could’ve tried to stop it. But it was me who tackled Riley. I got him down on the ground so Frankie could hit him with the log. And not just Riley, either, Jeff. There were other guys I tackled, punched, beat up.
Gay
guys, Jeff. Like you.” He pauses. “Like me.”
It’s almost too much to listen to. I make a sound in my throat and turn away.
“Sitting there in prison, I thought over and over again about how Frankie had gone upstairs with Riley, and I couldn’t deny what had been going through my mind as they were up there. That
I wished it was me
. That I wished it had been
me
who Riley had asked to go upstairs with him. I knew what happened up there. Frankie later tried to make it seem as if Riley had just made a pass, but I knew there was more. Frankie was hiding his own truth, though I doubt he admits it, even now. But the moment I acknowledged to myself that I wished it had been
me
that Riley took upstairs, everything became clear.”
I look at him. “How did you ever . . . I mean . . . how could you . . . in prison?”
He shrugs. “It’s surprising what you can find in the prison library. I began reading articles. Watching television. Remember that degree I told you I got? I got it in prison. See, I was determined not to sink to the depths that I saw all around me. I tried to isolate from the bad stuff as best I could. I learned to defend myself. I
had
to, Jeff. I was
sixteen
when I was locked up.
Sixteen.”
He pauses, looking at me. “Fresh meat. Chicken.”
I make another sound in my throat.
He looks down at his feet, scuffing his shoes in the sand. “I worked out at the prison gym, for hours at a time every single day. I made myself
strong
. I got involved in none of the bullshit of prison life.” He looks up at me. “See, I was
remaking
myself, Jeff. I was focused on one thing and one thing only: on getting
out.
I literally counted down the days until I could be free, until I could restart my life. I made a calendar, little boxes representing all four thousand-plus days of my confinement, and every day I’d check them off, one by one. Finally it got so that I’d checked off more boxes than were left, and I still remember crossing off the last one. That’s when I knew Brian Murphy was gone, and that Anthony Sabe lived.”
“It was your parole officer,” I manage to say. “That’s where you disappeared to once a week.”
He nods. “Very good, Jeff. Yes, I reported in once a week to the parole board in Hartford. I’d sleep the night in the bus station. I never missed one appointment. I was determined to finally get a clean slate. And this fall I was finally free. The year was up. I’d done my time. The whole thing was over.”
“But you had to travel so far,” I say. “First from New York, then from Boston. Why did you go so far away when you had to check in once a week in Connecticut?”
He lifts his eyebrows. “Didn’t you talk to any of the gay activists in the case, Jeff?”
My face betrays that I have.
“I thought so. Then I’m sure you found out how they protested my release. Surely you read the things they said about me, that I should have gotten the same sentence that Frankie got, but that the judge went easy on me because I was a privileged white boy. They hate me, Jeff. No, there was no way I could have stayed in Connecticut.”
“But your mother . . .”
Only for a second does any surprise register on his face. Then he smiles. “Well, very,
very
good, Jeff. I
am
impressed. You managed to talk with my mother. That will be a great addition to your story.” He laughs. “Well, then you know I was hardly privileged, and you can maybe also figure out the
other
reason I didn’t want to stay in Connecticut. My mother has no use for a gay son. She said I must have been raped in prison and brainwashed. She said she’d rather have a murderer for a son than a queer. Yes, she actually said those words.”
Astrid Murphy’s face is in front of me.
“Is it any wonder Brian’s messed up? Become this
—
thing?”
He’s looking at me. “My mother always contended that Riley simply got what he deserved, trying to pick up two underage boys.”
I put my hands to the sides of my head, staggered by the onslaught of information. I feel weak, as if the wind that whips down the beach will simply knock me over face first into the sand.
The images begin flooding through my mind: Anthony—
Brian
—in New Orleans, in Montreal, in Palm Springs, in my arms, in my bed, looking over my shoulder wistfully at my drawer full of gay trinkets and mementos.
Sitting there across from me that first morning at the Chelsea bistro, excited about blueberry pancakes and the glitter on the face of the waiter.
“So what do you find so fascinationg about gay culture?”
“Everything. I never imagined there was so much going on.”
And then on the monorail at Disney World, his pit stains showing on his red shirt, which he’d insisted on wearing
so that he could be identified as gay
.