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ChrisGibson

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A Short Story: Part 1

The week I turned eighteen, I lost my virginity. There were so many complications around that story that it was not half the triumph it was supposed to be, and there was no one to tell it too. Isaac Weaver the Man was remarkably unchanged from Isaac Weaver the virgin.
A week later I met Ef. And that was when I began to change.
Efrem was more than content to run my life for me. He was a drama major at the time, and minored in filling my life with terrors, pushing me onto the stage for the first time, bossing me to into choir, daring me to go to Mc.Cleiss University and streak South Quad, forcing me to open mike night. He accepted me, and no one but Jinny had ever done that. But unlike Jinny, he did not accept me remaining what I was when I could be more.
That’s a little sentimental, isn’t it? Remind me to never tell him that.
What I did not know about Ef, and would not learn for a long, time was how patient he could be. I did not know that he was sitting around hatching his plans, like a dragon on a nest of serpent eggs.
Efrem said there was no way I could not know his friends. They came around all the time, the guys he had gone to high school with some of who still lived in town. All I knew was that they were Black, and the night I met them I went to my bedroom and dressed in my hippest clothes, which were not hip at all, and stood in the mirror posing and saying things like, “What’s up? What’s up? What’s up?” over and over again, looking for the right tone, turning this way and that, going, “Sho nuff. “ until Efrem walked in right in the middle of my cool and asked me, “What the hell do you think you’re doing?”
“I’m getting ready,” I said, clearing my throat, “to meet your friends.”
“We went to Catholic school and grew up in the Melbourne,” Efrem said. “Not Compton. Come the fuck on and quit being senile.”
It was just Chuck and Shawn, and over the course of the night I began to understand what Efrem meant. They brought up some other friend of theirs: Gene who was going to school down in North Carolina now, and Arlinghton. I began to understand that, though Black people might have closer ties that white people, that didn’t make them all alike or all friends or all feel at home with each other. They really were not Compton, or Friday or even The Cosby Show. Efrem was Catholic and had grown up with white people when most Blacks around here were Baptists and didn’t know anything about whites. Shawn’s mom was white, and so was Chuck’s best friend was. His mom was half Irish.
This meeting was important because I was introduced to a people who really were outcast from an outcast culture and had to find their own way twice over. That made them like me.

Jinny went away to the Dakotas for the summer with her family, and this was when Efrem told me, “Grow a beard. Don’t ask questions. Just do it.”
I did. I thought it looked distinguished. I told Ef this. He said nothing.
One day after the beard had grown a good deal he came into the bookstore and told me, “I need to talk to Mr. Weaver.” A few minutes later he came out from my father’s office and said, “We’re going to the mall.”
We went to Wal-Mart and Target first, buying up clothes left and right. Ef always holding them up against me and nodding clinically. Then, in the mall, he dared to go inside of Abercrombie. Shawn and Chuck were with us, and the three of them marched me through stores buying up clothes and then I said, “What’s going on? Where’s all this money coming from?”
“Your dad,” Efrem said, smiling sweetly.
In one day we went through the malls, then to the eyeglasses in an hour place.
“Stick these on,” Efrem ordered.
I switched glasses.
“Malcolm X glasses,” Chuck said. “You look distinguished as fuck.”
They drove me up south of Melbourne to a place that was very... Black. Efrem rattled on the door. A guy black as night with an afro and a pick sticking out of his head answered.
“Here he is,” Efrem said.
I was a little terrified. It smelled like chicken and grease in the house. The guy murmured something and offered his fist.
“This is Maxwell,” said Efrem. “What he is telling you to do,” Efrem translated as if we were in another country, “is to also make a fist and hit the bottom of your fist to the top of his. Hitting the rock.”
I felt like I was in another country.
“Niggah what’s up!” a wiry guy hopped out a seat as Maxwell sat me down in mine.
“This is Gene,” Efrem told me. “Gene, this is Isaac.”
“What’s going on?” I demanded.
“You’re about to look like you should,” Efrem told me.
I watched this Black guy take off all my hair and I did not protest. I had this sort of faith that Black people could make me look good. And I wanted to look good.
“Dude,” Gene said when it was over, “you look like Malcolm X.”
“Only white,” Maxwell said.
“Or Denzel as Malcolm X,” Shawn said. “How you like that? You look like Denzel?”
“Only white,” Maxwell repeated.

I stayed the night at Ef’s. I tried on the clothes by myself and came down the hall from his bathroom to his bedroom, walking awkwardly.
“How do I look?” I asked him.
“Go look at yourself.” Efrem closed his door so I could look into his floor length mirror.
I shook my head.
“It’s you, Isaac,” he said. “It really is you.”
I turned around, running a hand over my scalp, the sides were shaved real low and I liked the way I looked. I actually thought, “This guy is kind of good looking.”
“Can you believe it?” I demanded.
Ef nodded, and spreading himself out across his bed explained, “White people are like Mr. Potato heads. You just change the hair and the glasses and you get a whole other person.”


“Shit” Isaac grunts at the table.
“Here, give it to me,” Efrem sticks out his hand.
Isaac hands him the knotted Saint Christopher medallion and Efrem’s fingers begin working through it.
“You were always better with knots than I am,” Isaac said. “Jinny got me that.”
“Well, I didn’t think you’d gotten it for yourself,” Efrem frowned over the knot. “This is awful. It’s like it’s got a mind of its own.”
“I think it likes to knot up because I’m Jewish.”
“Could be,” Efrem said, and continued unknotting the chain. “Why did Jinny get it for you.”
“I said I wanted one. I don’t know,” Isaac shrugged. “Dad’s middle name is Christopher. Go fig. A Jewish Christopher. But he had a Saint Christopher medallion. A girlfriend got it for him, and he would talk about Saint Christopher a lot, and I was just thinking I want one too. So I told Jinny, and she got me one, and I knot it up all the time. I wish Jews had saints.”
“You could get an Old Testament prophet or something. You all should start making Moses medallions… Ah… Ah!” Efrem looked pleased, and handed back the chain. “There you go.”
Isaac slipped it over his neck, and the medallion fell under his shirt. Now tt was invisible and all you could see was the thick hemp choker he wore all the time with the beads in it.
“I have never been to the cemetery to visit my mother,” Isaac said suddenly. “I didn’t think about that until tonight. You ever go see your dad?”
Efrem shook his head, “I didn’t really want to see him that much when he was alive.”
“Well, I never went to the cemetery to visit my mom.”
“Do you want to?” Efrem added. “I mean, I’ll go with you.”
“I don’t think I want to go,” Isaac said. “She’s dead. She’s not anymore at the cemetery than she is right here. She’s probably more right here in my room, in this house than any place else.”
They were both quiet a while and then Isaac said, “Catholics believe if you kill yourself you go to hell, right?”
Efrem looked at him strangely.
“I mean, don’t they?” said Isaac.
“Catholics don’t know what they believe,” Efrem said. “But yeah, I think that’s what the party line is.”
“Whaddo you believe?”
“Isaac, I’m not dead. I don’t know.”
“But do you think my mom went to hell?... And your dad?”
“What’s hell? Jews don’t even have hell. What does hell mean? What’s the point in talking about going to heaven and hell when no one knows anything about either one? Not much in my view. People in one are sad. People in the other one are happy. God’s in one, and he’s not supposed to be in the other. But I think he’s everywhere and really heaven or hell just depends on how you feel about it.”
Isaac looked up at his friend, as if he were waking up.
“I mean,” Efrem said, warming up, “think about this: Some people love Rhodes. I love that we live right on the beach. We can dip our feet in good old Erie anytime we want to. We can take a boat on the water and look at the stars. I think it’s lovely. Some people say, ‘I hate Rhodes. I hate Saint Anne County. It’s a hell hole.’ It’s the same place but for some people it’s heaven, and for other people it’s hell and if you gave them everything on a silver platter well then they’d still think life was hell, wouldn’t they?”
“I never thought about it like that,” said Isaac.
“Like, there were days when I hated this bookstore. Because I felt alone and cold. And then some days it was my retreat because I was too alone and cold to be anywhere else. But now I’m in it with you, or Jinny or Cile or someone I care about and it’s happy for me. I like being here.”
“Yeah, I think that’s what I mean,” Efrem said.
Isaac sighed heavily. Efrem looked at his friend, his green dragon eyes twinkling and though, if he were smoking the smoke would have rushed out his nostrils right now, like soot from a steamboat.


“I don’t know why I bother talking to you, Mister I Know Everything In The World There is To Know,” Anne said to her cousin.
“I don’t know why you do either,” Jayson Laujinesse said. “Not about stuff like that.”
“The problem with you,” Anne O’Muil told him, as she got up from the kitchen table and navigated Jinny, who was on the phone with Cecile, “is you don’t believe in anything you can’t touch or see.”
“You think that’s a problem, huh?” said Jayson.
“Well,” said Anne, opening the refrigerator, and taking out the orange juice. “Since you can’t see and can’t touch most things that exist, then yeah--it’s a problem.” she poured herself a glass. “You want some?”
“Sure,” Jayson said. “And you cannot get me to believe that you saw the Headless Woman on the Parkway--”
“She was right outside of Dennis near Mud Brook.,” Anne declared, sitting down and handing him a glass.
“When did you see her?”
“Last Halloween like a told you, nimrod--”
“Anne, would you keep it down,” Jinny said.
Anne nodded to her sister talking on the phone, “I was with Sheila Isherwood and Suzanne Stanley, and all of a sudden we see this woman in a white dress walking across the road. Everything’s so black out there you know. And her dress is so white, from the headlights I guess. Well we didn’t know she was the Headless Woman yet—”
“I would think that the absence of a head might be the first tip--”
“She had a head. Just listen.”
“Cause we thought she lived further out, Or died further out. Existed further out. Whatever dead people do.
“Anyway, we stop the car to let her cross. She’s so pretty,” Anne says, “And she looks at us, and the way some old men tip their hats, that’s when this bitch just rips her head off and sticks it back on.”
“You’re lying.”
“I sure in the shit am not,” Anne swore, and drank down her orange juice.
When Jinny was off the phone, Anne said, “Tell Jayson the story of the Headless Woman on the Parkway.”
“Jayson knows that story,” Jinny said.
“No he doesn’t. Tell him.”
Jinny sighed, sounding much put upon and then she began. “There was this woman—”
“About fifty years ago,” Anne added.
Jinny eyed her sister, and then went on. “And she married this army colonel, and they came and bought a house near what’s the Parkway now. Only then it was just Anderson Road. Anyway this woman got pregnant and had a baby and her husband would never come home, and then one night she got a phone call from her husband. He was at his mistress’s house and he said he wasn’t coming back. Well, he had the car, so she couldn’t drive and the woman was so distracted she picked up her baby and decided to run down the road to the house where her husband was. But she ran out into the road and was killed.”
“That is so sad,” Anne said, softly.
“Splat, like a tomato,” Jayson said.
“You are such an ass,” Anne said.
“It was thump like a guillotine,” Jinny said, unfazed. “Her head was knocked clean off. They say that sometimes you can hear the baby crying.”
There was a knock on the door, and then, without waiting for an answer, Isaac and Efrem came into the house, hands in their pockets, scarves wrapped around their necks, “Happy Halloween, all.” Isaac said.
“Ef, you know about the Headless Woman?” Anne said.
“Um hum,” he nodded. “The baby cries sometimes.”
“Have you ever seen it?” Jayson said.
Efrem shook his head.
“See,” Jayson said.
“So,” Anne said. “Ef’s never seen the Eiffel Tower either. Doesn’t mean it’s not real.
“So I’m supposed to believe this woman lives on the Parkway.”
“Lives or dies or whatever ghosts do,” Anne said, “Hey look, you don’t have to believe. Don’t believe it. Fine with me. I gotta costume to put on,” Anne said, leaving the kitchen.
“So you guys wanna go by the Headless Woman on Anderson Road tonight?” Jinny said.
“No thanks,” Efrem said. “I’m not all about headless people.”
“Ditto here.” Isaac said. “Party tonight at Saint Clare’s. Drink till your head falls off. Skip classes tomorrow. Headless Women are not in my plans at all.”
“You don’t believe in ghosts, Isaac?” said Jayson, immediately sorry when he remembered Isaac’s mother was dead.
Isaac just laughed it off, and Jayson laughed too, both pretending Isaac’s dead mother hadn’t come into both of their minds.




“Lives or dies or whatever ghosts do,” right Anne? Why do ghost always stay in the same place where they died? Because they don’t want to move on? No. Because we haven’t let them. We don’t know how to.
“Lives or dies or whatever ghosts do…”
The same way people are living, ghost are always dying. They’re always in the moment they went. They’re stuck in the past and so are we. The Headless Woman is always taking her head off. You don’t need to tell me.
Sometimes I’m still nine years old. For two years I stayed nine. If I hadn’t have passed my classes so well people would have thought I was retarded because I didn’t talk. And I was retarded. I mean I had slowed. I hadn’t just slowed. I had stopped.
It’s like a scab. And sometimes it’s like this terror that rises and rises and rises like an endless scream and I just cannot get a hold of it. Sometimes I feel frozen and afraid, and I think that I am all alone and completely disconnected. Sometimes I have wanted to die. I remember being just a little kid and thinking about all the ways I could kill myself. I just wanted to stop this suffering. I didn’t even want to feel better. I just didn’t want to feel.
Sometimes I stop in and stare at this room I used to love. This place used to be a general store, and this room used to be a storeroom back when Aramy Street was a dirt road. But by the time my parents lived in it it was just a large bedroom overlooking Aramy. It was the master bedroom and it had beautiful curtains and a bed with soft off white colors, and there was this vanity with all these bottles of perfume and it smelled like my mom. For years it smelled like her after she was gone.
I can still see it. I can still remember waking up from my nap and wondering what was on the floor. Being fascinated and frightened and innocent and watching. Like cough syrup or like sauce as the red trailed out of the bedroom. And me going closer and closer. It was the last time I was okay. I remember walking into that room. Sometimes I can still see... what you couldn’t see. Jesus Christ, she didn’t even have a face. I just backed away. I kept shaking my head and then I went to my room and curled up like a fetus and just trembled until Dad came home. He found Mom before he found me, and he tried to get me to talk. He tried to help but he could hardly help himself in those years.
Sometimes I just want to hold onto somebody and cry. I want to just bawl out everything and get rid of it. I want to ask Ef, “Don’t you feel this way?” I want to confess it to him because he knows about it and for some reason I just want him to take it all away and make it better.
Jayson Laujinesse thinks he knows everything. Anne is right. She’s right when she says watching sunrises will keep you sane. If I watched sunrises and sunsets I’d know when it was time to turn the light on. I wouldn’t be standing here stuck in my head waiting for someone to save me. I don’t have to go to the cemetery to be with my mother. I’ve always known that. That’s why I never go. She’s right here. Her blood and her brains are polished in the floor. And I don’t have to go to Anderson Parkway to meet a ghost, I’ve got my own headless woman right here on 4516 Aramy Street.
 
Thanks for reading. I feel like it's totally different from Rossford. At least, I don't feel very Rossfordy with these people.
 
PART TWO

Roma House was out past Mc.Cleiss, where route 6 joined the Parkway and bulleted north through less and less frequent signs of civilization. They talked about the day and now and Jinny could see Isaac’s face by the dim and infrequent light of road signs or headlights shining off of his square, black rimmed glasses. She wanted to see him again in the light.
She was in deep green. Cecile and Anne both said it made her hair stand out and showed off the green of her eyes. She almost never wore a skirt, but tonight she had one on, loose and creped, and her hair was pulled back a little, a few crinkled curls had escaped and hung loose about her face. She had thought about a shawl, but Cecile said it was too much.
“We don’t want you looking too old,” she said.
“We’re here, Ms. O’Muil,” Isaac told her, and rounded the car to open the door for her.
“You are such a gentleman,”
“Well, yeah,” Isaac said and offered his arm.
Now it smelled of fresh rain and the air was a little cool. The parking lot was slick and the concrete walk into Roma House was dark with the remains of the downpour. In the car, when she couldn’t see him, she could smell Isaac. She had always loved the smell of him. He had never lost it through the years.
Isaac lifted a finger to indicate she should wait, and he went up to the desk and then came back. He looked so take charge, or he looked like he wanted to look take charge, and it made Jinny smile. Isaac had never gotten very tall. He was only about five nine. He was five seven when she met him. He was so handsome tonight, all in black. He was wearing the one tailored coat he had, and his shoes were shining, and he had a little wine colored handkerchief peeking out of his jacket pocket, and a tie the same color, sharp against his white shirt.
“We’ll have to wait a few minutes,” he told her, and then grinned.
“What?” he said.
“What do you mean, what?”
“The way you’re looking at me,” Isaac said.
“You’re so cute,” Jinny told him.
“I was shooting for GQ.”
“You’re GQ cute, Mr. Weaver.”
Isaac pushed up his glasses and murmured, “Why thank you.”
Jinny timed that they waited fifteen minutes in line. They waited a combined total of a half hour for their main courses to finally arrive. And midway through her Lobster Newberg she wondered--along with how the hell Isaac was going to pay for this—when he was going to propose. She was chewing and watching him chew. He lifted his wine glass and toasted her merrily and she was totally in love with the idiot. She took a swig of wine and then kept eating and moaned.
“Oh, shit, what’s—” she started. People looked around. Isaac’s eyes widened. Jinny felt her tongue go through a circle. She fished around in her mouth, her eyes scanning the crowd to see if anyone was looking.
“Oh, Isaac,” she said, her mouth full, feeling like she was getting ready to cry.
“Virginia!” he said, plaintively.
She stuck out her tongue. She had curled it so that the diamond ring was perched right on the end like a crown.
“I will,” she said as best she could.
Isaac took the ring off her tongue, and slipped in on her finger.
And old woman came up to the table and said, “That is the sweetest thing I have ever seen.”
Jinny was about to say, In that case, I feel sorry for you. But she only smiled.

It was a little past midnight when Isaac Weaver lay in his bed, clenching and unclenching his fists, balling up his toes and blinking at the ceiling. After debating what to do with his persistent boner, he climbed out of bed, got dressed and left the house through the back way behind the store. Isaac headed up the three blocks to Bernard Street and climbed up the side of the house, past Professor O’Muil’s library. The light was on and Isaac smirked a little bit to think that the man had no idea his soon to be son-in-law was sneaking into his house.
Topping the roof Isaac nearly shrieked, but Anne caught his hand and shook her head with a Buddha calm.
“If you ask me what I’m doing out here,” Anne said, on the spine of the house, “then once again I’ll remind you that your presence is even more our of place than mine.”
Isaac sat beside Anne and she said, “Look at that moon.”
“Do you do this all the time?” he said. “Look at the world?”
“I’ve got to,” Anne said. “I’m seventeen. All the shit is crushing on me. Everyone’s telling me about the real world. Everyone wants me to believe in their version of it and everyone’s version sucks. If I don’t pull away and really look at the real world... well, then shit, Isaac, I’m fucked.”
Isaac sighed heavily and suddenly Anne’s arm was around him. Then she kissed him on the cheek.
“Welcome to the family, brother.”
Isaac looked shocked.
“Did she tell you?”
“She told me,” Anne said. “But I already knew. She hasn’t told the rest of the family though.”
“Good,” Isaac said, “I said we should announce it together.”
“Have you told your dad?”
“He was asleep when I got in. We’ll tell him tomorrow.”
“And then the patter of Irish-Jew feet,” Anne murmured.
“I think we’ll put that off for a while.”
Isaac pushed himself up. Anne helped him not to fall. To their left was Anne’s open window, to the right, on the house’s back end, was Jinny’s.
“Please,” Anne said, “try not to keep me awake all night.”
“Stop it,” Isaac said, “you make stuff up.”
“I don’t make up the moans coming from the other side of my wall whenever you stay here., I hope you lock the door because if Mom or Dad comes in and finds you sewing your oats, it’ll be a funeral before there’s a marriage.”
“Here here,” muttered Isaac. “Goodnight Anne.” Isaac tapped on Jinny’s window. In her room the light came on and she blinked at him.
“Oh,” anne said sneaking into her room, “Did you know the first president of the republic of Ireland was a Jew?”
“Where do you get all this from?” Isaac asked her.
“Aemon DeValara. I’m serious,” Anne said. “Leave it to the Jews.”
Then as Jinny opened her window, Anne disappeared into hers.
“Isaac, what are you doing here?” Jinny said.
He kissed her on the mouth and hopped into her room.
“I’m here to fuck my wife of the future.”



He wakes early in the morning and kisses her goodbye. There are things he hasn’t done. He hasn’t been home for one thing, and for another, he never told Ef. Ef is his best friend in the whole world, and because that is the case he waits for morning rather than waking him last night.
He has no ring to show his friend. He drives down the mile or so to the Melbourne neighborhood and does as he always has, parking on the street and going up the sideyard, unhooking the gate and going up the trellis that is, Ef says, the only sturdy thing CJ Walker ever made before Efrem’s father blew his own head off. The trellis leads to the long low balcony that goes about the back of the house which is not as long as the first story. This is the window through which he has always come to Ef’s room, and its open a little, and the curtains are open a little.
Efrem puts his hand to the latch, and his mind does not catch up with his eyes and his eyes do not catch up with something else he cannot name. It is simply something he never expected to see.
He never imagined Sean Giveny would be so beautiful. He has only seen Efrem’s friend, who is as bookish as he, half black with his black curls and ivory skin in jeans and plaid, not like this, not lovely honey colored limbs, arms and legs, not twisted with Efrem who is beautiful, thick limbed, red brown. He knows… No, he doesn’t know anything. He is nothing but an eye. He kneels by the window and watches the two of them, naked on the bed, tangled and kissing, hands roving over each other’s bodies.
Now he knows his throat is dry. Now he knows the air is cold. Now he knows, as Sean turns on his back, as Efrem, with the roundest, loveliest ass, places himself between Sean’s legs, that he is more than an eye, that he is watching what he should not, that he is hard, his dick harder and thicker than its ever been. The world spins around him and he turns away. Slowly, at the same time he hears a grunt of satisfaction, a sigh of release, Isaac crawls back the way he came.


Me and Isaac went to the mall that afternoon. What I usually like to do in the mall is point out how bad everybody looks, but Isaac was far off and vacant, the way he’s been since he showed up to my door.
“What the fuck is wrong with you?”I said, but there was no harshness in it. I don’t think.
We had dinner at his house and he said, “I’ve been reading these letters. My mom’s. I won’t make you read them—”
“I’d like to,” I said. “If you want me to.”
Without waiting he says, “I want you too.”
“Of course,”I say.
“It’s almost…” Isaac begins. Then he says, “I can barely do it by myself.”


My Dearest Christine,
I wonder if you’ve forgiven me now. You know Isaac’s eleven? Who knew? I mean, I suppose we all knew that nine years could pass but back then I was just pregnant. He was just the inconvenience. He was the reason things changed, the balance that tipped. And for a long time it was alright. It was more than alright. Having a child was enough, enough for me not to mind, not to mind if you minded. It mattered if you could forgive me, but not as much as it matters now. Not when I don’t feel anything for Aaron, not when I wish I could love Isaac more, when I wonder if I really love him at all. When I wonder if this love can save me.
When I was growing up, I was taught love could save me, and love had saved me. But I don’t know about that anymore, and I’m afraid. I feel like I’m drowning, like I’m about to do something very dreadful. Before I do I, before I’m on the news, I wanted to tell you that I’m sorry, and that I will never stop loving you.

Yours,
Elizaveth.




I was quiet for a long time and then I said, “Isaac, I’m lost. I don’t know what the hell she’s talking about.”
Suddenly he said, “Why didn’t you tell me you had sex with Sean?”
“What?” Efrem said, looking the closest to surprised Isaac ever saw him.
“Why didn’t you tell me you slept with Sean?”
“If you knew,” Efrem said, “then why didn’t you ask?”
“Oh, no!” Isaac stood up. “Fuck you for that! That’s evasion.”
“Yes,” Efrem said. “You’re probably right.”
“Probably—” Isaac started. Then he said, “Were you… afraid I would judge you?”
Efrem frowned at him.
“It’s not yours to judge, Isaac Weaver.”
“I know—”
“I’m not afraid of you or anyone else.”
Isaac came down from the high horse he wanted to be on so badly.
“I… just wanted you to know… I accepted you.”
“You don’t get to accept me,” Efrem said.
Isaac said nothing.
“You don’t get to accept or reject,” Efrem said. “I do as I please. Just like you do.”
Isaac was silent a little longer, and then he said, “Why didn’t you say anything, then?”
“Because I thought you’d be jealous.”
Isaac didn’t even protest, but this time Efrem elaborated.
“We’ve always been closer than brothers, closer than friends. We’ve always been so close… Part of me felt almost like I was cheating on you. If that makes sense.”
That was the missing part, what he had felt when he had seen Ef with Sean, what he could not name, or didn’t dare examine.
“That isn’t fair, though,” Isaac said.
“What?”
“I was with Jinny all these years, but you thought that… No, it’s not fair if you feel like you can’t tell me about who you’re with.”
“You’re right,” Efrem said, and there was no tone to his comment. “It isn’t.”




“We’re on a mission,” Isaac tells me.
“Yes?”
“We have to find Christine Johnson.”
“From the letters?”
“Yes,” Isaac says. “And actually, I’ve found her. So what I really mean is I need you to come with me.”
“Where does she live?”
“In Grasshouse. She didn’t go far. I hate to ask you, but would you go with me?”
“Of course!”
“I’ve got to know the truth,” Isaac is telling me. “I’ve got to know what’s really going on. Or went on., I asked my Dad. And you know how calm he is? He wouldn’t tell me and then suddenly old Aaron just swung out and hit me in the face.”
“What?”
Isaac waved it off, “He cried about it later on. He feels bad. But he still won’t talk about Christine so…” Isaac shrugs.
“I guess we’ll see,” I say.
“Yes,” Isaac says. “I guess we will.”
 
PART THREE



EFREM

It is two days before Christmas. I don’t know what we’ll find at this woman’s house, but I can’t imagine it would be the sort of Christmas, or Chanukah or Devali or whatever the hell you celebrate present that anyone would want.
Isaac drives. I can tell he’s nervous because he keeps drumming on the steering wheel and humming loudly. He hasn’t told Jinny about this trip. We go east on Route 6 until we’ve passed the snowy entrance to Saint Clare. The red brick buildings just closed for winter break a few days ago. We drive down Route 6 for about ten minutes until it has become a little less congested with burger joints and banks, and there are one of two Dairy Queens, a video store, a realty office.
“Have we passed Magnum Street yet? Isaac asks me.
I tell him I don’t think so because I haven’t seen it. But I wasn’t looking for it. In the end we haven’t passed it. We turn south and go straight for three or four blocks. The route to this woman’s house is too straightforward.
“Nice neighborhood,” I say.
Isaac nods. “Little bungalows. Cute.”
All the trees are black and naked. Plastic creches and crappy reindeer are out. Some old woman across the street still has out pumpkins, probably frozen, certainly rotten by now.
“783 Magnum is the house,” Isaac tells me.
It’s a brick bungalow with a simple red concrete porch. This is ugly to me, and the red paint is chipping.
Isaac turns to me putting on an excited face.
“I’m nervous,” he says.
“You shouldn’t be,” I tell him, but I don’t mean it. I’m hoping this bitch will not be at home. I’m hoping she has something good to say.
Isaac knocks on the door, bolder than he feels, and when a woman answers it he asks, “Are you Christine Johnson?”
“I already have a religion.”
“What?” Isaac starts, then, “No… I’m not a Jehovah’s Witness. Or a Mormon. I’m… Are you her? Are you Christine Johnson?”
“I am?” she looks from him to me, nervous.
“Ma’am, my name is Isaac Weaver,” he begins, and she nods and then a look comes over her face.
“Weaver?” she says.
“Yes, ma’am,”
“Isaac,” she says.
He nods.
“And this is my friend, Efrem. I came because you knew my mother. She wrote all these letters to you. Which I have. So, I never thought about it till now, but you must have sent them back and--”
“Ma’am,” Efrem interrupted, “could you let us in? It’s cold.”
I don’t mean to be rune, but she’s being rude.
She lets us in. It smells like old, salty chicken soup. It smells like bouillon cubes. Christine says, “What is it that you want?”
“To understand,. To know who you were to my mother. Why she did what she did.”
I had not looked at her yet. She looked very tired, as if she’d just come out of a long sickness, and her face was lined, her pores large. Her blond hair was stringy and dark at the roots. She wasn’t in work clothes, but jogging pants and a sweatshirt, so I imagined she was off on holiday.
Christine cocked her head and then said, “How old are you now?”
“Twenty-three, ma’am.”
“Quit calling me ma’am,” she said, only half serious. There was a far off look in her eyes. “I guess it would have been that long ago now. Years fly. Watch out for that when you get old,” she looked at us. “Years fly.”
She sighed and said, “Do you boys drink tea?”
We didn’t, but we said yes, and she said, “I’ll make us tea and tell you the truth. As much of it as I know. I’ll do my best. I’ve never told it before. You all are good friends, aren’t you?” she looked from me to Isaac.
“Yes,” Isaac insisted, shooting me a glance that was naked with love.
“Good,” Christine said grimly, sitting us in her living room, “because what I’m about to tell you, you’d only want a best friend to know.”

We sat with our mugs of tea, hot and sweet before us, and Christine said, “Have you boys been friends for long?”
Christine said to Isaac, “I met your mother when I was a little girl. We went to Catholic school together.”
Isaac looked up in shock.
“Saint Hyacinth’s.”
“Mom was Jewish,” Isaac said. “I’m Jewish.”
“Well, yes and no,” Christine said. “I think it depends on what school you belong to. I think Orthodox say you’re only a Jew if your mom’s Jewish, and so I guess it matters what Elizabeth thought she was. Anyway, her mom was an Irish Catholic. He dad’s last name was Teidelbaum. Did you know your grandmother made your mother get all of her sacraments?”
“No,” Isaac said, sounding kind of dead. “I get the feeling there’s a lot I didn’t know about my mother.”
Christine sighed. “Yes, you’re right,” she told him. “She was my best friend. We decided we’d live together forever. Be old maids together. We got to high school. Public. Your grandfather was insistent that she get out of Catholic school. He hated Catholics. Go figure why he married one. He didn’t want his daughter being a nun. We had boyfriends and dated and everything. She liked little dark haired guys. I teased her and said she liked Jews. But, of course, there’re a lot of Irish Catholics who are dark haired with glasses. Anyway. she gravitated toward Jews later on because that was the part of her life she hadn’t been raised with. You grandfather, much as he didn’t like Catholics, didn’t practice Judaism, and he was a long way away from his family.
“But Elizabeth’s prime love was for me,” Elizabeth said, “and in college, when she was studying in New York and I was down in Dayton, I made it known that I was a lesbian. Within a year we were lovers. No one was more shocked than us.”
I looked at Isaac and could tell by the pallor of his skin and his complete stillness that really no one was more shocked than him.
“We were... happy,” Christine said. “It was right. Sometimes she wanted to date guys. Look, but don’t touch. Neither of us was virgins. We realized a man couldn’t give us what we needed. Unless what we needed was to feel normal. When we moved back here, I guess Elizabeth needed to feel normal. She needed her parents to see her with a guy. And this is when Aaron came into the picture.”
Catherine looked up at Isaac.
“Your grandfather liked Aaron Weaver. I liked him too. I thought he was just a friend. It wasn’t until the end—it wasn’t until we split up, Elizabeth and me, that I moved back home, that I understood what was going on.
“All of a sudden she was getting married to Aaron because, you see, she was pregnant.”
Isaac nodded, his jaw hard.
“I didn’t believe it. I could not believe it. I cried myself to sleep for months. I did not come to the wedding. Aaron wondered about that for a long time and that was when I knew he didn’t know about us, your mother and I, anymore than I had known about them.
“It wasn’t until after you were born that he found out, and he was so angry. He was ballistic. Aaron gets like that. He is the sweetest little man, and when rage grabs him, it takes control and so he was wild with it. I think he beat Elizabeth. I think I was happy. He called me and he just screamed the most horrible things and then he told me to never contact her again.”
Christine paused. She took in a very deep breath, and lifted the coffee mug to her lips. After that she said, “That’s when the letters began. I take it things were never happy for her again. That’s when she began to fall apart. And pity was something I didn’t have then. I was so hurt. I made sure to return every letter she ever sent. And then the day I read in the paper that... she was dead…
“Dead,” she repeated. “All I could think was... I was right here, across town, a town away. If things were that bad you could have come.”
The house was so quiet and for a long time no one made a sound and then I said, “Thank you so much, Ma’am, would you like us to clean up a little?”
“No,” she waved it away. She had forgotten we were there.
We put on our coats and left. I think Isaac mumbled thank you. We drove back onto Route 6, heading back to Rhodes. We didn’t say anything until Isaac pulled over to the side of the road and suddenly he shut off the car, began sucking in breaths and balling up his fist until they turned white.
I could see his eyes starting to tear up and so I looked away, and then he turned his back and started to bawl into the car door. It was the worst sound I had ever heard. It sounded like he was ripping his lungs up, and he just kept on gasping and I don’t know how long it lasted.
When he had quieted down, his voice was winded, like he’d done a lot of running, but he was dignified and he said, “Efrem, I would greatly appreciate you reaching into that glove compartment and handing me the old handkerchief. Not the blue one. That’s a snot rag. The white one is clean.”
I handed it to him, he began wiping his red and white face and blowing his nose.
“Thank you.”
“You’re welcome.” I told him.
He started to laugh and cry at the same time and he said, “Oh, Goddamnit, Ef. Goddamnit!” and kept laughing and then crying. At last he stopped.
“I don’t want to go back to Rhodes,” Isaac said.
“Let’s keep driving,” I said.
And so we did. We stayed on Route 6 until we were well out of Grasshouse and we kept driving until we were lost, and then when it seemed like we knew where we were, I directed Isaac to drive until we were lost again. We drove till we were tired of driving, and found an old Holliday Inn.
“Wonder if it’s got a pool in it.”
“If it’s got a burger joint nearby and good beds, does it matter?”
I agreed with Isaac.
“I’m paying,” he said.
I did not object.

The little desk lamp was the only light. I will always remember the smell of his cigarettes and my coffee and the goldenness of the light and us sitting together and the love between us almost as thick as blood.
“I was twelve when we moved to Rhodes. My father was never happy. Every time he had a job he was mean and miserable because he had to work, and when he was unemployed he was drunk and miserable because there was no work. He was just an unhappy man, and he was always telling my mother that if we moved somewhere else then he’d be happy. I remember one night, when I was ten, we up and left Missouri for Topeka Kansas. In the middle of the night. That’s where we got Cecile.
“You know Gene? Well, his dad and mine went to school together, and so Gene’s dad got mine a job as a manager over at the glass plant in Sandusky. Hence, how we ended up here. And then, at my twelfth birthday party, with Gene and a bunch of kids I don’t know... No, I take that back, Ryan Laujinesse was there because we had to invited everyone we went to school with—my father’s had the most original plan. Always one to make a bang--the man was never dull--C.J. Walker came out dressed as a clown, pulled out a handgun and blew his goddamned head off.”
I could tell that Isaac was shocked by my lack of shock.
“You saw it?”
I nodded.
“You actually saw your dad fucking blow his head off?”
“But you knew that.”
“I knew it happened,” Isaac allowed. “But not, that… You…”
“Oh, yes. I saw it.. There’s really nothing like it,” I told him.
“Jesus fucking Christ,” Isaac said, taking in a breath, and then taking a long drag on his cigarette and sending jets of smoke out of his nostrils.
“You never told me what your mom was like,” Efrem said. “But you know what my dad was like. I don’t think you’ll ever understand how I feel now until you know how I felt then. What went through my mind when he died. The whole week of it, what shook my system for a long time after they put him in the ground.
“C.J. was nuts. My whole life was a prison, at his whim. There was nothing permanent, there was no happiness, and I was nothing more than baggage. I really was. I hadn’t a friend in the world Every time I made one they vanished. Or, I vanished. When he died, that was the moment I knew that I was free. Those old Gospel hymns about finding freedom in the blood of Jesus? Sometimes I can see the moment CJ did that, when I see it I see a clown suit, a bunch of white kids in my backyard and blood. Lots and lots of blood. And my freedom. That’s what I always associate my freedom with.”
Isaac sat across from me. Suddenly, looking very business like he crushed his cigarette out in the little glass ashtray we’d stolen from Wallace’s
“This shit shucks,” he sobbed,
He took the back of his hand across his face.
”The only thing is for a long time I couldn’t cry I was so angry. And now I’m not angry anymore. I’m just sad, just real, real sad.”
He sat there, still, and tears ran down his still face, and I buried my face in my hands and I didn’t cry, but I felt exhausted and tired, like I’d just cried, and we were both like that for a while and then Isaac wiped his face and said, “I never tell you what my mom was like because I can’t remember. I keep thinking that maybe that’s cause I didn’t really care about her. I didn’t really pay attention and that maybe if I had then---”
“Isaac.”
“I should have paid attention,” he banged his fist into his palm. “I didn’t pay attention to my own mom.”
“Well who gives a fuck?” I snapped.
“What?”
His eyes flew open. He scowled at me.
“Who gives a fuck?” I asked again.
“You’re right, Isaac. You probably didn’t pay her attention. You probably did take her for granted, but shit, you were eleven. How else were you supposed to be? You can’t blame yourself for some crazy bitch taking her life.”
Isaac started to talk, and then I put up a hand. “You can’t. And you can’t let her rule your life. Not that’s she’s dead. Don’t give her that. What the fuck did she give you?”
“She gave me life?”
“She gave you hell. I’m giving you life. We’re all giving you life. Jinny, me, Cecile, Aaron. Think about that Isaac.”
He was breathing evenly now, We both were. He looked a little like a hawk in Buddy Holly glasses.
 
I am glad Isaac got some answers. Some people like his Mum have sad lives. I think you handled the telling well though. Great writing and I look forward to the next part!
 
I'm glad you enjoyed. I' glad to show something a little different from Rossrord. I realized that last in one part I meant to indicate that Efrem was speaking, and left that out so there was a change in perspective without indicating it. I have a question I meant to ask the other night. What did you think of Isaac watching Efrem have sex in part two?
 
I'm glad you enjoyed. I' glad to show something a little different from Rossrord. I realized that last in one part I meant to indicate that Efrem was speaking, and left that out so there was a change in perspective without indicating it. I have a question I meant to ask the other night. What did you think of Isaac watching Efrem have sex in part two?

I thought it was a bit weird at first but in the end it made sense because they have such a close relationship. It makes me think something might happen between Efrem and Isaac but I guess I will just have to wait and see.
 
REAL GOOD: CONCLUSION

“Are you asleep?” Efrem asks.
He asks because he has lain on his back awake in this queen sized bed across from the other queen sized bed and all of the day is still going through is head. He almost whispers it, says it in a voice a little louder so that he will not wake Isaac if, indeed, Isaac is asleep.
But he isn’t, and Isaac says so.
“I never feel asleep,” Efrem says. “I can’t sleep.”
“”Can I ask you a question?”
“Yes.”
“Sean?’
“Yes?’
“Do you love him?”
“I do,” Efrem says. “I’ve always loved him. We’ve been friends since… a long time.”
Isaac doesn’t say anything ,and Efrem says, “Do you have any other questions?”
Efrem thinks, Do not let your next question be something I can’t answer.
“No,” Isaac says. “And then, “I do, but they don’t make sense. They’re not important. You know?”
When Efrem says nothing, Isaac says, “They’re the kind of questions that die on your tongue cause they don’t make enough sense out loud. They don’t matter enough.”
“Come here,” Efrem says.
Isaac climbs out of bed. He is in his jockeys, and he sits on the side of the bed looking down on Ef.
“You don’t have to ask if I love Sean more than you. It’s a different love. You know. You’re going to be a married man and I’m going to be a man with a man and so, you know, our love is our love. It’s complete. It’s what it is.”
Isaac stands up, but only to lift up the comforter, and climb under it, beside Efrem.
“It’s what is is now,” Isaac says.
It is at the same moment that Isaac leans closer that Efrem kisses him, that hands go to hands and arms pull each other in, that hands run up and down naked backs and bodies push together. Hearts and loins rise, Cocks swell and touch as legs wrap together and all questions are silenced in kissing, all breathing deepened by taking in each other’s breaths. They move under the blanket silently. While Efrem’s tongue is shoved into the wet hotness of Isaac’s mouth, Efrem tugs down Isaac’s briefs as Isaac yanks down his shorts. Moaning under Isaac and the heart of his body, Efrem is almost breaking. In the darkness of that room they give themselves up to the wonder of each other.


Later on Isaac will write in his journal, “Then there was nothing between us, because nothing should be between us.”



“You want me to leave her?”
Efrem said nothing.
“You can’t just be silent,” Isaac said. “It’s not fair.”
“None of it is fair.”
The morning light is weak and they lay on the bed together, white skin and brown skin, limbs tangled together, Isaac’s head pressed against Efrem Walker’s chest.
“I hadn’t planned this,” Efrem said, “when we got up yesterday this wasn’t the plan.”
“But it was,” Isaac said.
Efrem thought of Isaac coming to the door, his winter white skin glowing, his dark hair and dragon eyes, his jeans tugged into tan boots, the big winter jacket, smell of his cologne.
“It’s always planned, in some way,” Efrem said.
Isaac said, touching Efrem’s chest. “This is what we are to each other. I didn’t know I loved you like this.”
“But I think you love her just as much.”
They didn’t speak her name. It wasn’t right.
“I think you love her as much as you love me.”
“You love Sean as much as you love me?”
Isaac looked up at him and raised an eyebrow.
“No,” Efrem said, honestly. Then he said, “I don’t think I can love anyone as much as I love you. Not really.”
Isaac sat up in bed, swearing.
“Goddamn.’
“What?”
“You can’t fucking say that to me when I’m about to get married.”
Efrem lay on his back, not saying anything.
“If I’m getting married you need to tell me the guy you love you love just as much as me. You need to tell me that you and Sean are a good idea and me and Jinny are a good idea and you and me are a bad idea.”
“But we’re not a bad idea,” Efrem said. “We’re an undeveloped idea, and that’s totally different.”
“Well ,then, Isaac turned to him, standing before him naked, having no idea how beautiful he was, long and toned, the color of roses, buttocks small and round, his sex dangling from the dark cloud of hair, “What do you want from me? From us? You want to just sit there cool like you always are and watch me marry Jinny?”
“I want you to come back to bed,” Efrem said, honestly. “Everything we did I waited too long to do and didn’t even understand that I was waiting for it.”
When they had made love again, and it was Efrem whose head was in Isaac chest and they were both gasping, covered in sweat and sticky with semen, Efrem said, sanely, though is voice was shallow. “I’m the first man you’ve ever been with. I want to be your last. I’m your best friend. I don’t really believe you can shift from that to the love of a lifetime. Not so quickly.”
“So you won’t have me?” Isaac said. “You’ll stay with Sean?’
“For now. Yes.”
“And you want me to go and marry Jinny.”
“Isaac,” Efrem said, pushing himself up so that they were face to face, head on pillows.
“I am not going to go from your best friend to your boyfriend right now. I’m not. It’s just… not wise. But what you choose to do with that is your decision.”




Thursday evening the sun set quickly. It was still winter. It was a fresh snow. Isaac wondered why Valentine’s Day wasn’t in the spring when birds were singing and flowers popped up. Jinny smelled so good beside him, and because the heat was blasted up in the car, the smell of her perfume blossomed and filled up the space.
“Where are we going, Isaac?” she said.
“I hope I can remember,” he told her.
They headed southwest on Main, past City College and out to where there were more ranch houses and fewer sidewalks, then Isaac turned and swung through gates, and Jinny said, “We’re in a cemetery. Albeit a cemetery that looks like a golf course, but a cemetery. Isaac, are we about to do something freaky?”
“I don’t think so,” he told her as they drove, paying more attention to the lay out of the necropolis. He seemed to remembering something.
When they parked, he rounded the car to let her out.
“Now,” he told her, taking her gloved hand in his, “this isn’t romantic, but it’s necessary.”
They crossed the dead grass, the hillocks of snow, and Isaac looked down at the headstone that was cracked and abandoned and read:



ELIZABETH C. WEAVER

1953-1988

Devoted wife,
Fearless mother


“Those last two lines I can’t attest to,” Isaac told Jinny, “I can’t even say that I accuse her. But I can say I’m letting her go. I’m here for that right now. I guess that’s your big present, I brought you here with me now that I’m letting go of the ghosts. I haven’t been here since I was eleven. I probably won’t come back again. But, I had to now, to bring you here, and this is certainly the most unromantic thing I could think of doing.”
He squeezed her hand and she squeezed it back.
They stood at the grave for along time, Jinny unable to tell anything from Isaac’s face and then they got back in the car and drove to his house.
“Isaac, how are you?” she asked him.
He didn’t smile, he did the little brow furrowing thing she was so used to and said, “Really, really good, actually. Real good.”
 
(It turns out I wasn't put on a jury today! :)) Great conclusion! I can see the story continuing but if it doesn't it was a good ending. Efrem and Isaac really do love each other and it was sweet to read about that.
 
I was in a bind with them, because they are actually part of a longer story, and this story is written before that story, so it's already a matter of record that Isaac marries Jinny. It was only a long time later looking at other stuff, that I realized Isaac and Ef were in love, and I had to find some way to address it, and so, there they are for now ,and I really love the story in its bittersweetness too. The next stand alone story in here will be The Good Guys, and to my chagrin, Isaac and Ef will not be in it. I'm so glad you didn't have jury duty, and so glad you enjoyed the story.
 
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