ChrisGibson
JUB Addict
RODDER BUMPED INTO Mick Rafferty who was coming out of the guidance office as he was going in.
“Sorry, Mr. Rafferty,” Rod smiled brightly. Then: “You look a little grown up for guidance.”
“Is anyone too grown up for guidance?”
“You’ve been hanging around Mr. Stearne too long,” Rod said.
“I’ve just been looking at some international programs for students. You know?” Mick shook the pamphlets around.
“I’m looking for an art school.”
Mick raised an eyebrow as if to say, “You?”
Rod’s brow furrowed.
Mick chuckled: “Ah, the football face that won the championship!”
Rod laughed and said, “Did I look that mean?”
“In a word, yes. Art schools? Come on over here,” Mick said.
“Don’t you have a class?”
“In a few minutes. But this guidance counselor doesn’t know anything.“
“Maybe you should take over.”
“Maybe I’ve thought about it,” Mick gave the teenager a half smile. “Right there. That shelf. Those are all the high brow ones. Your Juilliards and stuff are on the top. Then, below that, everything else.”
Rodder bit down on his bottom lip, and looked over the shelf, nodding.
“You alright, Rod?” Mick Rafferty inquired.
“Yeah, sir,” Rod answered.
“Blackjack!” Cedric shouted, and threw down the card.
“Shit!” Ida swore and Ralph shook his head, laying down his hand.
The doorbell rang.
“Vaughan!” Cedric shouted. “Vaughan!”
“I don’t think he’s here,” Ida said.
“He might be ignoring you,” Ralph suggested.
“I know, I would.” Ida stood up, pulled her wallet out of her back pocket, and forked over the money she had lost to her friend.
“Pleasure doing business with you.”
“Kiss my ass,” Ida returned as Cedric went down the hallway to answer the door.
“Rod!” Cedric said in surprise. “Madeleine’s not here.”
“Who is it!” Ida shouted.
“Rod!” Cedric shouted back.
“Bring him in for a drink!”
They both ignored her.
“I know she’s not here, sir,” Rod said. “That’s why I’m here. Can I talk to you a minute?”
“Cedric!” Ida shouted. “Rod!”
“Hold on, old woman!” Cedric shouted back.
Cedric led Rod down the hall and into the study. He flicked on the light and gestured for Rod to enter.
Rodder opened up his Starter jacket and showed Cedric:
“An application to art school? This is real nice, Rod, but not your style and.…” Cedric frowned and looked up at the boy.
“Not your name either.”
“It’s a surprise. If it doesn’t work out, well then she doesn’t have to know, but if it does...” Rod said. “I have everything I need to send it in except— ”
“You don’t have an application fee,” Cedric said, turning it over.
“I don’t care about that,” Rodder shoved the matter away with his hand.
“I do,” Cedric said, going to his desk. “I’m not having you send off applications for other people... especially if the other people is my daughter, and then also flip the bill yourself.”
“Please, Mr. Fitzgerald,” Rod said so firmly that Cedric looked up at him in earnest. “I want to do this. I just need....”
“Her grades? Her records?”
“Yeah.”
Cedric smiled and said, “She’s a lucky one. I’ll tell you that, Roderigo Luis. My daughter’s a lucky one.”
“Hey Kenzie, take a peak at this,” Derrick Todd said that night when he was over at the house. “Against your sister’s wishes I thought you should have a look at this.”
“Whaddo you mean against my wishes,” Lindsay said petulantly. “I was just pretending.”
“What is it?” Mackenzie took up the list.
“It’s the invite list for everyone who’s anyone to the party of the year!”
Ian raised an eyebrow from where he sat beside Mackenzie. “Am I on it?”
Derrick turned red and said, “By association. It’s sort of a given.”
“Actually,” Lindsay said. “There are certain people we assumed wouldn’t want to be on it.”
“Oh,” Ian said. “Then you were right to count me out.”
“Am I on it?” Tina smiled prettily.
“No,” Lindsay said.
“Then it seems like everyone who’s no one to me,” she said.
“I meant everyone who’s anyone in the junior and sophomore class,” Derrick amended.
“You got some people crossed out on this list,” Mackenzie noticed.
“Some of them were cool, but they had issues,” Derrick said.
“Like Jaime Tolliver. What’s wrong with him?”
“God, Mackenzie wake up!” Lindsay stood up. “He’s the head of the Gay Student Union.”
“Yeah,” Derrick said. “This is Jamnia. No faggots at my party.”
“I think you need to leave,” Tina said suddenly.
“What?” Derrick said.
“You can’t throw my - ” Lindsay started.
“You need to leave,” Tina said again. “It’s no assholes at my house.”
LINDSAY TRIED TO STOP HIM, but Derrick Todd stopped at the corner table of the cafeteria the next day while the two of them were leaving.
“Tina,” he said. “I just wanted to say that I’m sorry for whatever I said.”
“Whatever?” Tina said. Turning to Vaughan, she rolled her eyes and said, “Welcome to the Midwest!”
“I don’t get it,” Derrick said, looking around, honestly clueless.
“Todd,” Vaughan said. “You might as well plan a party, say no niggers allowed, and then shrug and say you don’t get it.”
“I- ” Derrick started. “I would never call anyone that. And I’m not like that.”
“But you would call people faggots?” Tina said.
“Look,” Derrick threw up his hands. “Social lesson learned. No more fags. I won’t say fags. What’s the big deal?”
Suddenly Mackenzie said, “The big deal is I’m gay.”
“What?” snapped Lindsay.
Rodder, who had been left out all this time, only cocked his head the same as Derrick.
Finally Derrick said, “Mackenzie, did you just say- ? ”
“I said I’m gay,” Mackenzie repeated. “It’s none of your business. But there! It’s all out and loud and all over the place.”
“God, this can’t be happening,” Lindsay said. “You are not gay.”
“Yes I am!”
“You’re not!”
“And I’m his boyfriend,” Ian added.
“What?” Rodder’s eyes rolled.
Lindsay smacked Ian across the face, and Ian hopped out of his chair followed by Roy. Derrick stood between them and Lindsay.
“What’s going on?” Ashley came over. “I try to pretend we’re not related, but you all are acting ridiculous.”
Ross had seen two fellow football players and three of his siblings and came over too.
“Mackenzie’s saying stupid things,” Lindsay told them. The circle was getting wider.
“The only one who’s saying stupid things is you,” Mackenzie said.
“Take it back. Take back everything you just said!” his twin shouted.
“Don’t take back a goddamned thing!” Ian shouted.
“You shut up!”
“I’ll smack you back this time, bitch!”
“I’ll join him,” Vaughan said in a low voice.
“Guys, let’s calm down,” Rod said, trying to moderate, but it was the presence of George Stearne, coming toward them, accompanied by a lunch monitor that succeeded in this.
Ross broke the silence by saying: “Guys, someone please tell me what’s going on.”
Mackenzie turned to his brother and said, “Ross, I’m gay is what’s going on.”
Everyone remained quiet.
Ashley threw back her head and laughed.
“Holy shit!” she murmured, and shook her head.
As Vaughan, Mackenzie and Ian went down the hall, Mackenzie said, “Can you feel them pointing at us?”
“Burning right into my scalp,” Ian replied.
“Vaughan,” Mackenzie said, turning to his friend as they neared his locker, “you don’t have to deal with this. I mean, they’ll probably think you’re gay and - ”
“And what? Someone has already taken great care to write FAGGOT across my locker, ” Vaughan muttered. “Besides, who the hell else am I gonna hang out with?”
“This shit isn’t fair to you,” Mackenzie told his friend.
Vaughan frowned sourly. “Fuck fair. What’s fair got to do with anything?”
They almost collided with Matt Abelard and Jaime Tolliver, himself, head of the Gay Student Union.
“Scuse me!” Mackenzie said.
Tolliver looked at Mackenzie. He looked at Ian.
“Is it true?” he said.
Mackenzie nodded.
“You?” he said to Vaughan.
“Sorry,” Vaughan shrugged.
“That’s alright,” he grinned back. “Everyone can’t be.”
“I’ll be an honorary homosexual if I don’t have to pay membership fees,” Vaughan offered.
Jaime Tolliver smiled. “My people’ll definitely talk to your people. Anyway, don’t worry. I got you guyses backs. If that counts for anything.”
Mackenzie looked around the hall. He felt, though he was probably wrong, that everyone was looking back at him.
“It counts for a lot right now,” he said.
It did not take long for things to spread. Before the end of the day there were pink triangle Post-Its pasted to Ian and Vaughan and Mackenzie’s lockers. Ian saw his first, and was about to rip them off and swear when he realized they had been put there by the Gay and Lesbian Student Union.
“It’s their welcome sign,” Vaughan said placidly. Lockers were alphabetically assigned - only the Freshmen and seniors had separate locker areas, so the boys were all more or less together.
“Well, look,” Vaughan took a Post-It off of his locker. “Janey Watkins writes to say hi. I always liked her. Never knew she was bi though,” he murmured. “Whaddo yours say?”
“Vaughan,” Mackenzie said. “This is silly, and it’s dangerous.”
“Mackenzie, relax,” Vaughan said.
“Vaughan is one of those rare people,” Ian said, “that doesn’t care what people say about him.” He was flipping over a piece of paper scribbled on by Michael Radcliffe, the guy with the drooping lip from band who always talked about masturbation.
“Like you?” said Mackenzie.
“I care,” Ian said. “I just try not to look like it.”
Jane MacDonald, who had spent the year popping up next to Mackenzie and hitting on him as much as possible, sidled up to him after sixth period and said, “Is it true?”
Mackenzie looked down at her and said, “If what you’re talking about is what I think you’re talking about then, yeah... It’s true.”
Jane was quiet for a second, and then she said, “Oh,” and walked away.
On the porch steps, Lindsay had not only bothered to talk to her sister for once, but chose to argue with her. Tina and Lindsay were going back and forth, Tina leaning against the wall, her black hair falling straight behind her, blowing out smoke while Lindsay railed on and on. Luke stood bored beside Tina. Derrick looked anxious.
A couple of burnouts came out to light up, and one said, “Hey, Fosters? Is it hereditary?”
“I don’t know what you mean, Arthur,” Tina said to Snake. “But I’m surprised you could even get the word hereditary out of your mouth.”
“I mean,” Snake Roberts, formerly called Arthur, expanded, “Your dad’s pretty sweet too. He tried to cup my ass back in gym class two years ago.”
“You’re a liar!” Lindsay snapped. But Tina just said, “You should have said yes. My mother assures me he’s the fuck of the century.”
“Maybe you should try him yourself,” said Snake. “Or are you two a bunch of dykes?”
Tina was surprised to see not only Derrick’s hand ball into a fist and move for Snake, but Luke move too.
She shook her head at both of them. Quietly, she stepped in front of Derrick.
“Yeah, I’m a dyke,” Tina said. “I would have answered sooner except I was still trying to get the last of your mother’s pussy hair from between my teeth.”
“Shit man, she burnt you!” Rand McGafferty tittered, and high fived another one of Snake’s burnout friends.
“She talked about your mama,” another burnout said.
Snake blenched.
“You leave my mother out of this.”
“I can’t even remember your mother’s name,” Tina said. “Of course she wasn’t up for much conversation. Neither was I. My mouth was full.”
“I’m warning you!”
Derrick looked very serious for once. He loomed over Snake and said, “I think you’d better go now.”
Snake’s eyes went beady and he stared up at Derrick who stared down at him. Then another burnout said, “Come on, man. Fuck this. It’s not worth it.”
When they left, Tina said to Derrick, “How did you do that?”
He shrugged and said, modestly. “It’s an old football trick. For pipsqueaks such as myself.”
“Against my will,” Luke told him, “I’m starting to like you, man.”
By the end of gym class, Kevin had heard enough rumors, and when someone had called Roy a faggot, “Just like his cousin,” and Kevin had stopped a fight, he really began wondering. He paced around the gymnasium in his jogging suit, waiting for Roy to finish dressing.
“Roy,” he called the gangly boy over when he had come upstairs from the locker room.
Roy looked a little nervous, which wasn’t like him. He’d started to warm up since being around Ryan. The boy came toward him.
“Can I ask you a question, Roy?”
“Yes,” Roy ducked his head.
“It’s about... There are rumors. Ah...”
“Sir,” Roy surprised Kevin. “people shouldn’t pay attention to rumors.”
Kevin cocked his head and looked surprised.
“Am I right, sir?” Roy said. “I don’t even know who my dad is, and I used to hear rumors. But... I started to grow up. It’s not right, playing with rumors. Is it?”
Kevin was dumbfounded on several accounts, and said, “Well, no Roy. I guess it’s not.”
Roy nodded sharply. Then he turned his blue gaze away from Kevin, and was gone.
MACKENZIE WAS GLAD the day was over. He could not be like Vaughan, who seemed to ride on the tides of infamy. He was exhausted. He wanted to be plain Mackenzie, though he was acutely aware that he had brought this on himself. He and his two friends, backpacks strapped on, were plodding down the hall into the main lobby, and out of the entrance on Michael Street as he thought, I was the one who proclaimed it on the roof tops, or, at least, the table tops of the cafeteria. He wondered if it was too late to turn back. Why should he?
“Why should I?” Mackenzie said out loud.
“What?” Ian turned to him.
“Nothing,” Mackenzie shook his head.
“Why should you, indeed!” Vaughan murmured, reaching for his cigarettes.
As they were heading down Michael Street, toward the Fitzgerald house, Derrick Todd’s car stopped.
They came near it. He rolled down the windows. Lindsay, in the passenger seat, was trying her best to ignore them.
“I wanted to know if you guys would still come to my party?” Derrick said. “It’ll be cooler now. I mean, I really want you all. The theme now is “No Losers”. “No Assholes who say Dumb Things”. If you’re up to it?”
Vaughan looked at Mackenzie, who nodded.
“Yeah,” Mackenzie said. “That’ll be cool.”
Derrick made a gun out of his right hand, fired, and said, “See ya there, then.”
Ian leaned into the car and said, repeating Derrick’s gesture, “See ya, Lindsay.”
She glared at him. He just smiled.
The car drove off.
“I’m starting to like that guy,” Vaughan confessed.
When they were within ten feet of the white house, Bone McArthur’s car was the next to stop, but it was Ashley who spoke, leaning over the football player.
“So, Kenzie, is it real?” Ash demanded. Bone didn’t bother to look at anyone. He just looked tiredly ahead at the street.
“Yeah,” he said.
She gave him a half mocking smile, and then said, “Welcome to the world of the outcasts, baby brother.” To Bone she said: “Drive.”
And the car roared away.
MORE TOMORROW
“Sorry, Mr. Rafferty,” Rod smiled brightly. Then: “You look a little grown up for guidance.”
“Is anyone too grown up for guidance?”
“You’ve been hanging around Mr. Stearne too long,” Rod said.
“I’ve just been looking at some international programs for students. You know?” Mick shook the pamphlets around.
“I’m looking for an art school.”
Mick raised an eyebrow as if to say, “You?”
Rod’s brow furrowed.
Mick chuckled: “Ah, the football face that won the championship!”
Rod laughed and said, “Did I look that mean?”
“In a word, yes. Art schools? Come on over here,” Mick said.
“Don’t you have a class?”
“In a few minutes. But this guidance counselor doesn’t know anything.“
“Maybe you should take over.”
“Maybe I’ve thought about it,” Mick gave the teenager a half smile. “Right there. That shelf. Those are all the high brow ones. Your Juilliards and stuff are on the top. Then, below that, everything else.”
Rodder bit down on his bottom lip, and looked over the shelf, nodding.
“You alright, Rod?” Mick Rafferty inquired.
“Yeah, sir,” Rod answered.
“Blackjack!” Cedric shouted, and threw down the card.
“Shit!” Ida swore and Ralph shook his head, laying down his hand.
The doorbell rang.
“Vaughan!” Cedric shouted. “Vaughan!”
“I don’t think he’s here,” Ida said.
“He might be ignoring you,” Ralph suggested.
“I know, I would.” Ida stood up, pulled her wallet out of her back pocket, and forked over the money she had lost to her friend.
“Pleasure doing business with you.”
“Kiss my ass,” Ida returned as Cedric went down the hallway to answer the door.
“Rod!” Cedric said in surprise. “Madeleine’s not here.”
“Who is it!” Ida shouted.
“Rod!” Cedric shouted back.
“Bring him in for a drink!”
They both ignored her.
“I know she’s not here, sir,” Rod said. “That’s why I’m here. Can I talk to you a minute?”
“Cedric!” Ida shouted. “Rod!”
“Hold on, old woman!” Cedric shouted back.
Cedric led Rod down the hall and into the study. He flicked on the light and gestured for Rod to enter.
Rodder opened up his Starter jacket and showed Cedric:
“An application to art school? This is real nice, Rod, but not your style and.…” Cedric frowned and looked up at the boy.
“Not your name either.”
“It’s a surprise. If it doesn’t work out, well then she doesn’t have to know, but if it does...” Rod said. “I have everything I need to send it in except— ”
“You don’t have an application fee,” Cedric said, turning it over.
“I don’t care about that,” Rodder shoved the matter away with his hand.
“I do,” Cedric said, going to his desk. “I’m not having you send off applications for other people... especially if the other people is my daughter, and then also flip the bill yourself.”
“Please, Mr. Fitzgerald,” Rod said so firmly that Cedric looked up at him in earnest. “I want to do this. I just need....”
“Her grades? Her records?”
“Yeah.”
Cedric smiled and said, “She’s a lucky one. I’ll tell you that, Roderigo Luis. My daughter’s a lucky one.”
“Hey Kenzie, take a peak at this,” Derrick Todd said that night when he was over at the house. “Against your sister’s wishes I thought you should have a look at this.”
“Whaddo you mean against my wishes,” Lindsay said petulantly. “I was just pretending.”
“What is it?” Mackenzie took up the list.
“It’s the invite list for everyone who’s anyone to the party of the year!”
Ian raised an eyebrow from where he sat beside Mackenzie. “Am I on it?”
Derrick turned red and said, “By association. It’s sort of a given.”
“Actually,” Lindsay said. “There are certain people we assumed wouldn’t want to be on it.”
“Oh,” Ian said. “Then you were right to count me out.”
“Am I on it?” Tina smiled prettily.
“No,” Lindsay said.
“Then it seems like everyone who’s no one to me,” she said.
“I meant everyone who’s anyone in the junior and sophomore class,” Derrick amended.
“You got some people crossed out on this list,” Mackenzie noticed.
“Some of them were cool, but they had issues,” Derrick said.
“Like Jaime Tolliver. What’s wrong with him?”
“God, Mackenzie wake up!” Lindsay stood up. “He’s the head of the Gay Student Union.”
“Yeah,” Derrick said. “This is Jamnia. No faggots at my party.”
“I think you need to leave,” Tina said suddenly.
“What?” Derrick said.
“You can’t throw my - ” Lindsay started.
“You need to leave,” Tina said again. “It’s no assholes at my house.”
LINDSAY TRIED TO STOP HIM, but Derrick Todd stopped at the corner table of the cafeteria the next day while the two of them were leaving.
“Tina,” he said. “I just wanted to say that I’m sorry for whatever I said.”
“Whatever?” Tina said. Turning to Vaughan, she rolled her eyes and said, “Welcome to the Midwest!”
“I don’t get it,” Derrick said, looking around, honestly clueless.
“Todd,” Vaughan said. “You might as well plan a party, say no niggers allowed, and then shrug and say you don’t get it.”
“I- ” Derrick started. “I would never call anyone that. And I’m not like that.”
“But you would call people faggots?” Tina said.
“Look,” Derrick threw up his hands. “Social lesson learned. No more fags. I won’t say fags. What’s the big deal?”
Suddenly Mackenzie said, “The big deal is I’m gay.”
“What?” snapped Lindsay.
Rodder, who had been left out all this time, only cocked his head the same as Derrick.
Finally Derrick said, “Mackenzie, did you just say- ? ”
“I said I’m gay,” Mackenzie repeated. “It’s none of your business. But there! It’s all out and loud and all over the place.”
“God, this can’t be happening,” Lindsay said. “You are not gay.”
“Yes I am!”
“You’re not!”
“And I’m his boyfriend,” Ian added.
“What?” Rodder’s eyes rolled.
Lindsay smacked Ian across the face, and Ian hopped out of his chair followed by Roy. Derrick stood between them and Lindsay.
“What’s going on?” Ashley came over. “I try to pretend we’re not related, but you all are acting ridiculous.”
Ross had seen two fellow football players and three of his siblings and came over too.
“Mackenzie’s saying stupid things,” Lindsay told them. The circle was getting wider.
“The only one who’s saying stupid things is you,” Mackenzie said.
“Take it back. Take back everything you just said!” his twin shouted.
“Don’t take back a goddamned thing!” Ian shouted.
“You shut up!”
“I’ll smack you back this time, bitch!”
“I’ll join him,” Vaughan said in a low voice.
“Guys, let’s calm down,” Rod said, trying to moderate, but it was the presence of George Stearne, coming toward them, accompanied by a lunch monitor that succeeded in this.
Ross broke the silence by saying: “Guys, someone please tell me what’s going on.”
Mackenzie turned to his brother and said, “Ross, I’m gay is what’s going on.”
Everyone remained quiet.
Ashley threw back her head and laughed.
“Holy shit!” she murmured, and shook her head.
As Vaughan, Mackenzie and Ian went down the hall, Mackenzie said, “Can you feel them pointing at us?”
“Burning right into my scalp,” Ian replied.
“Vaughan,” Mackenzie said, turning to his friend as they neared his locker, “you don’t have to deal with this. I mean, they’ll probably think you’re gay and - ”
“And what? Someone has already taken great care to write FAGGOT across my locker, ” Vaughan muttered. “Besides, who the hell else am I gonna hang out with?”
“This shit isn’t fair to you,” Mackenzie told his friend.
Vaughan frowned sourly. “Fuck fair. What’s fair got to do with anything?”
They almost collided with Matt Abelard and Jaime Tolliver, himself, head of the Gay Student Union.
“Scuse me!” Mackenzie said.
Tolliver looked at Mackenzie. He looked at Ian.
“Is it true?” he said.
Mackenzie nodded.
“You?” he said to Vaughan.
“Sorry,” Vaughan shrugged.
“That’s alright,” he grinned back. “Everyone can’t be.”
“I’ll be an honorary homosexual if I don’t have to pay membership fees,” Vaughan offered.
Jaime Tolliver smiled. “My people’ll definitely talk to your people. Anyway, don’t worry. I got you guyses backs. If that counts for anything.”
Mackenzie looked around the hall. He felt, though he was probably wrong, that everyone was looking back at him.
“It counts for a lot right now,” he said.
It did not take long for things to spread. Before the end of the day there were pink triangle Post-Its pasted to Ian and Vaughan and Mackenzie’s lockers. Ian saw his first, and was about to rip them off and swear when he realized they had been put there by the Gay and Lesbian Student Union.
“It’s their welcome sign,” Vaughan said placidly. Lockers were alphabetically assigned - only the Freshmen and seniors had separate locker areas, so the boys were all more or less together.
“Well, look,” Vaughan took a Post-It off of his locker. “Janey Watkins writes to say hi. I always liked her. Never knew she was bi though,” he murmured. “Whaddo yours say?”
“Vaughan,” Mackenzie said. “This is silly, and it’s dangerous.”
“Mackenzie, relax,” Vaughan said.
“Vaughan is one of those rare people,” Ian said, “that doesn’t care what people say about him.” He was flipping over a piece of paper scribbled on by Michael Radcliffe, the guy with the drooping lip from band who always talked about masturbation.
“Like you?” said Mackenzie.
“I care,” Ian said. “I just try not to look like it.”
Jane MacDonald, who had spent the year popping up next to Mackenzie and hitting on him as much as possible, sidled up to him after sixth period and said, “Is it true?”
Mackenzie looked down at her and said, “If what you’re talking about is what I think you’re talking about then, yeah... It’s true.”
Jane was quiet for a second, and then she said, “Oh,” and walked away.
On the porch steps, Lindsay had not only bothered to talk to her sister for once, but chose to argue with her. Tina and Lindsay were going back and forth, Tina leaning against the wall, her black hair falling straight behind her, blowing out smoke while Lindsay railed on and on. Luke stood bored beside Tina. Derrick looked anxious.
A couple of burnouts came out to light up, and one said, “Hey, Fosters? Is it hereditary?”
“I don’t know what you mean, Arthur,” Tina said to Snake. “But I’m surprised you could even get the word hereditary out of your mouth.”
“I mean,” Snake Roberts, formerly called Arthur, expanded, “Your dad’s pretty sweet too. He tried to cup my ass back in gym class two years ago.”
“You’re a liar!” Lindsay snapped. But Tina just said, “You should have said yes. My mother assures me he’s the fuck of the century.”
“Maybe you should try him yourself,” said Snake. “Or are you two a bunch of dykes?”
Tina was surprised to see not only Derrick’s hand ball into a fist and move for Snake, but Luke move too.
She shook her head at both of them. Quietly, she stepped in front of Derrick.
“Yeah, I’m a dyke,” Tina said. “I would have answered sooner except I was still trying to get the last of your mother’s pussy hair from between my teeth.”
“Shit man, she burnt you!” Rand McGafferty tittered, and high fived another one of Snake’s burnout friends.
“She talked about your mama,” another burnout said.
Snake blenched.
“You leave my mother out of this.”
“I can’t even remember your mother’s name,” Tina said. “Of course she wasn’t up for much conversation. Neither was I. My mouth was full.”
“I’m warning you!”
Derrick looked very serious for once. He loomed over Snake and said, “I think you’d better go now.”
Snake’s eyes went beady and he stared up at Derrick who stared down at him. Then another burnout said, “Come on, man. Fuck this. It’s not worth it.”
When they left, Tina said to Derrick, “How did you do that?”
He shrugged and said, modestly. “It’s an old football trick. For pipsqueaks such as myself.”
“Against my will,” Luke told him, “I’m starting to like you, man.”
By the end of gym class, Kevin had heard enough rumors, and when someone had called Roy a faggot, “Just like his cousin,” and Kevin had stopped a fight, he really began wondering. He paced around the gymnasium in his jogging suit, waiting for Roy to finish dressing.
“Roy,” he called the gangly boy over when he had come upstairs from the locker room.
Roy looked a little nervous, which wasn’t like him. He’d started to warm up since being around Ryan. The boy came toward him.
“Can I ask you a question, Roy?”
“Yes,” Roy ducked his head.
“It’s about... There are rumors. Ah...”
“Sir,” Roy surprised Kevin. “people shouldn’t pay attention to rumors.”
Kevin cocked his head and looked surprised.
“Am I right, sir?” Roy said. “I don’t even know who my dad is, and I used to hear rumors. But... I started to grow up. It’s not right, playing with rumors. Is it?”
Kevin was dumbfounded on several accounts, and said, “Well, no Roy. I guess it’s not.”
Roy nodded sharply. Then he turned his blue gaze away from Kevin, and was gone.
MACKENZIE WAS GLAD the day was over. He could not be like Vaughan, who seemed to ride on the tides of infamy. He was exhausted. He wanted to be plain Mackenzie, though he was acutely aware that he had brought this on himself. He and his two friends, backpacks strapped on, were plodding down the hall into the main lobby, and out of the entrance on Michael Street as he thought, I was the one who proclaimed it on the roof tops, or, at least, the table tops of the cafeteria. He wondered if it was too late to turn back. Why should he?
“Why should I?” Mackenzie said out loud.
“What?” Ian turned to him.
“Nothing,” Mackenzie shook his head.
“Why should you, indeed!” Vaughan murmured, reaching for his cigarettes.
As they were heading down Michael Street, toward the Fitzgerald house, Derrick Todd’s car stopped.
They came near it. He rolled down the windows. Lindsay, in the passenger seat, was trying her best to ignore them.
“I wanted to know if you guys would still come to my party?” Derrick said. “It’ll be cooler now. I mean, I really want you all. The theme now is “No Losers”. “No Assholes who say Dumb Things”. If you’re up to it?”
Vaughan looked at Mackenzie, who nodded.
“Yeah,” Mackenzie said. “That’ll be cool.”
Derrick made a gun out of his right hand, fired, and said, “See ya there, then.”
Ian leaned into the car and said, repeating Derrick’s gesture, “See ya, Lindsay.”
She glared at him. He just smiled.
The car drove off.
“I’m starting to like that guy,” Vaughan confessed.
When they were within ten feet of the white house, Bone McArthur’s car was the next to stop, but it was Ashley who spoke, leaning over the football player.
“So, Kenzie, is it real?” Ash demanded. Bone didn’t bother to look at anyone. He just looked tiredly ahead at the street.
“Yeah,” he said.
She gave him a half mocking smile, and then said, “Welcome to the world of the outcasts, baby brother.” To Bone she said: “Drive.”
And the car roared away.
MORE TOMORROW

































