ChrisGibson
JUB Addict
Prynne frowned, and as he looked at the bearded man he was beginning to see something, and he said the name even as the man told it.
“Dennis Lorry.”
A considerably older Dennis nodded.
“Well,” Prynne smiled and laughed, “I can see why you took your time coming here.”
“You apologized for your school,” Dennis said. “Now I have to apologize for me. I can’t make up for what I did. I… have you ever heard the phrase wrong side of history?”
“Indeed.”
“Everyone I know, everyone in my neighborhood talks about how progressive and equality minded they were in the sixties and the seventies, how much they loved every body and wanted … equal rights and people holding hands and … I’ve heard myself say that because I’m embarrassed of what I was. I was a very, very stupid kid who repeated what my parents said. And… there’s no excuse for it. I’ve been ashamed of my actions for a long time.”
“Well,” Prynne, who was never good with apologies said, briskly, “I’m sorry for throwing a noose around your neck and setting your room on fire.”
Dennis was not ready to make light of it, though.
“Father Abbot,” he said, “I am sorry for thinking it was funny that little girls died in church fires. I am sorry for making a joke about lynch mobs, and I am sorry for acting like the things that people who looked like me, who are me, the shameful things we did were things that should have made you ashamed. I… don’t expect any of this is easy for you to hear, but if you need friends, I am one. And even though they’re not here that stands for Dom and Tony and all of us. We were worse than assholes, and I hope in time you really understand how sorry we all are.”
The truth was Eutropius Prynne hadn’t thought about Dennis Lorry since graduation, and didn’t suppose he would ever see him again. The world had been changing, and Prynne wasn’t naïve, but the time of the Dennis Lorrys was fading even when he and his friends had been there.
He wasn’t overly ambitions. He had done well enough for an academic scholarship at Saint Damian’s down the road, and this is where he went along with Andy and Benji. Jason went down to Bloomington, and once or twice, when Prynne visited, he’d wished he gone too. It seemed like everything university was supposed to be with enormous halls, a college encompassing a whole town and the secularism he had never been a part of. Ben found his own secularism, sleeping his way though the girls’ dorms and no longer afraid of buying condoms. Privately, Tommy Prynne thought it was strange he had ever considered being a monk and agreed that it was wise of Merrill to have told his friend to go to college first.
Senior year of college, Jason wrote and told him two things; he was staying at Bloomington for his Masters, Prynne should too, and what was more, he had met a girl called Wendy and he thought they were going to be serious. Andy surprised them all by saying he was going to graduate school in Florida and Ben, who was going to graduate school nowhere, decided to go down south and be roommates with Prynne.
Before the first year of their graduate program was over, Jason had married Wendy, and soon she was pregnant with their first child.
“Will you be the godfather?” Jason asked.
“Is a Jewish godfather a thing?”
“You’re not Jewish, so that doesn’t matter.”
So Tommy Prynne agreed.
By then they were done and thinking of, but not serious entertaining, earning PhDs, and Tommy and Ben went off driving around the country, and while Ben fucked women, Tommy wandered outside under the stars or sat under trees. In motels he leaned against the wall, writing in his journal while the bed creaked and girls cried out under his best friend.
For a very brief moment Tommy had a series of odd jobs and very much frustrated his parents who had paid for a good education, and then he wandered through ashrams and Buddhist monasteries, and one day Ben showed up again and they drove to visit Jason who was harried and unhappy, but trying to hide it, surrounded by his three kids.
“She’s not bad,” he continued. “It’s not Wendy. It’s me.”
Prynne didn’t see the point in saying, “Well, you did get married awfully quick,” which is exactly what Ben said while he eyed the waitress.
Ben never ogled women or pressed them. He was quiet and soft spoken, and he paid them real compliments because he really loved women. They ended up laughing and talking with him, and then in bed with him before the night was over.
“I can’t explain it,” Ben said, softly while they were driving toward Calverton to visit their old school. “I just have a sort of… passion.”
Abbot Merrill was glad to see them. They were surprised—but not completely—to learn that Andy Reed was now a postulant. They stayed for a week, and Lewis Merrill was never the kind of person to ask, “Are you alright,” or to suggest things politely. He just came to Prynne and said, “They need an English teacher at Saint Damian’s, and I said you were coming on Wednesday,” and that was that. The night before he was leaving, Ben came to him, very quiet, and he said, “Here’s the thing, Tommy…. I’m not leaving. I’m staying here.”
To his credit, Thomas Prynne was not the type of person who doubted people or thought he knew what their limits. Ben was full of love. His lust was a lust for life. He was the sweetest most compassionate person Prynne knew, except maybe Jason. If anyone could give this life a try, it would be his best friend.
“Prynne…?” Ben started.
“Yeah.”
Ben looked like he had a great question in his hazel eyes, but instead he shook his head and pulled his hands through the marmalade hair that still fell in his face after all these years and said, “Nevermind.”
“Dennis Lorry.”
A considerably older Dennis nodded.
“Well,” Prynne smiled and laughed, “I can see why you took your time coming here.”
“You apologized for your school,” Dennis said. “Now I have to apologize for me. I can’t make up for what I did. I… have you ever heard the phrase wrong side of history?”
“Indeed.”
“Everyone I know, everyone in my neighborhood talks about how progressive and equality minded they were in the sixties and the seventies, how much they loved every body and wanted … equal rights and people holding hands and … I’ve heard myself say that because I’m embarrassed of what I was. I was a very, very stupid kid who repeated what my parents said. And… there’s no excuse for it. I’ve been ashamed of my actions for a long time.”
“Well,” Prynne, who was never good with apologies said, briskly, “I’m sorry for throwing a noose around your neck and setting your room on fire.”
Dennis was not ready to make light of it, though.
“Father Abbot,” he said, “I am sorry for thinking it was funny that little girls died in church fires. I am sorry for making a joke about lynch mobs, and I am sorry for acting like the things that people who looked like me, who are me, the shameful things we did were things that should have made you ashamed. I… don’t expect any of this is easy for you to hear, but if you need friends, I am one. And even though they’re not here that stands for Dom and Tony and all of us. We were worse than assholes, and I hope in time you really understand how sorry we all are.”
The truth was Eutropius Prynne hadn’t thought about Dennis Lorry since graduation, and didn’t suppose he would ever see him again. The world had been changing, and Prynne wasn’t naïve, but the time of the Dennis Lorrys was fading even when he and his friends had been there.
He wasn’t overly ambitions. He had done well enough for an academic scholarship at Saint Damian’s down the road, and this is where he went along with Andy and Benji. Jason went down to Bloomington, and once or twice, when Prynne visited, he’d wished he gone too. It seemed like everything university was supposed to be with enormous halls, a college encompassing a whole town and the secularism he had never been a part of. Ben found his own secularism, sleeping his way though the girls’ dorms and no longer afraid of buying condoms. Privately, Tommy Prynne thought it was strange he had ever considered being a monk and agreed that it was wise of Merrill to have told his friend to go to college first.
Senior year of college, Jason wrote and told him two things; he was staying at Bloomington for his Masters, Prynne should too, and what was more, he had met a girl called Wendy and he thought they were going to be serious. Andy surprised them all by saying he was going to graduate school in Florida and Ben, who was going to graduate school nowhere, decided to go down south and be roommates with Prynne.
Before the first year of their graduate program was over, Jason had married Wendy, and soon she was pregnant with their first child.
“Will you be the godfather?” Jason asked.
“Is a Jewish godfather a thing?”
“You’re not Jewish, so that doesn’t matter.”
So Tommy Prynne agreed.
By then they were done and thinking of, but not serious entertaining, earning PhDs, and Tommy and Ben went off driving around the country, and while Ben fucked women, Tommy wandered outside under the stars or sat under trees. In motels he leaned against the wall, writing in his journal while the bed creaked and girls cried out under his best friend.
For a very brief moment Tommy had a series of odd jobs and very much frustrated his parents who had paid for a good education, and then he wandered through ashrams and Buddhist monasteries, and one day Ben showed up again and they drove to visit Jason who was harried and unhappy, but trying to hide it, surrounded by his three kids.
“She’s not bad,” he continued. “It’s not Wendy. It’s me.”
Prynne didn’t see the point in saying, “Well, you did get married awfully quick,” which is exactly what Ben said while he eyed the waitress.
Ben never ogled women or pressed them. He was quiet and soft spoken, and he paid them real compliments because he really loved women. They ended up laughing and talking with him, and then in bed with him before the night was over.
“I can’t explain it,” Ben said, softly while they were driving toward Calverton to visit their old school. “I just have a sort of… passion.”
Abbot Merrill was glad to see them. They were surprised—but not completely—to learn that Andy Reed was now a postulant. They stayed for a week, and Lewis Merrill was never the kind of person to ask, “Are you alright,” or to suggest things politely. He just came to Prynne and said, “They need an English teacher at Saint Damian’s, and I said you were coming on Wednesday,” and that was that. The night before he was leaving, Ben came to him, very quiet, and he said, “Here’s the thing, Tommy…. I’m not leaving. I’m staying here.”
To his credit, Thomas Prynne was not the type of person who doubted people or thought he knew what their limits. Ben was full of love. His lust was a lust for life. He was the sweetest most compassionate person Prynne knew, except maybe Jason. If anyone could give this life a try, it would be his best friend.
“Prynne…?” Ben started.
“Yeah.”
Ben looked like he had a great question in his hazel eyes, but instead he shook his head and pulled his hands through the marmalade hair that still fell in his face after all these years and said, “Nevermind.”


























