These Things Happen. Richard Kramer

These Things Happen - Richard Kramer


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I don't know. Who has time? Why would I want to hook up when I could be learning new SAT words or giving back to the community?" Our school is famous for the concept of giving back, which they start beating into our heads in third grade. "We're here," he says.

      We are, at Eighty-sixth and Second, right outside tae kwon do. I'm just coming back to it, as I had to take a few weeks off. I broke a toe at 2:00 A.M. at Dad and George's, from a stubbing I endured when I woke up hungry and went in the dark to the kitchen, where there are always eleven cheeses and foreign crackers and cookies made of ground-up nuts. I said, "Fuck!" very quietly, but George heard me and got up. He didn't even say anything; he just made an ice pack and grilled half a sandwich for me in his panini press. Then we talked for a while, also very quietly. We didn't want to wake my dad.

      I'm fine now, though. "We should get in there," I say to Theo. I see a muffin on the steps, with no owner in sight, sitting there like it's just enjoying the day.

      "Wait," he says. "Everything you say seems to be about George, pretty much. What about your dad?"

      "What about him?"

      "He's an old gay guy, right? So what's he like?"

      "My dad." I look at the muffin again, and realize I'm starved. "Well, he's got green eyes, like mine, and a similar chin." I touch mine. We have clefts, my dad and I; Ben, my stepdad, says we could both keep change there. "And he's a fine person, of course."

      "That I know."

      "Like who doesn't." Sometimes I think I could mention my dad to a cop on a horse, or the horse itself, and they'd say, Oh, yes, I admire him immensely. "And there's squash," I say. "The game, not the vegetable. He plays at the Yale Club. He might teach me, even, when he's got time."

      "Did George go to Yale?"

      "He didn't go to any college. He was just in shows."

      "I'll have to learn all this stuff, I guess," says Theo. "Not to mention new gay stuff. Maybe your dad would talk to me."

      "So can I go now, with what I want to ask you?" I hear the chant that starts tae kwon do, but I don't care. "You can probably guess what it is."

      "Why didn't I tell you I was going to do all that today."

      "Why didn't you tell me you were going to do that today?" I ask.

      "I totally would have," he says. "Definitely. Unquestionably."

      "Stop using adverbs." I've picked this up from Mr. Frechette, who is passionate on the subject of their overuse. "Just answer."

      "I would have," Theo says again, and more, too, but at just that moment girls pass, the kind of girls I think of as New York girls, although they can be from anywhere. I stop listening to Theo, or hearing, anyway. They're all texting and talking and smiling at their phones, like they were better than boyfriends. The girl with the fastest fingers stops for a moment. She smiles, not at me, I'm sure, but it's a smile in my direction all the same. And suddenly, standing there, I'm not there. I know just where I am, though, where I've gone, which is to a park, in my mind, where I lie on clean, warm grass while the fast-fingered girl texts all over me, my whole body and my cock, too, little secrets everywhere. And then I hear Theo again, and come back.

      "And I guess the biggest reason I didn't tell you," he says, "is that I didn't know it was going to happen. It came out on its own, one might say. Like it had been waiting, for the right event."

      "So have you been gay all along, do you think?"

      "Probably," he says. "I don't think it was sudden, like a hive or a nosebleed. I don't think that happens, but there might be recorded cases. There are always recorded cases of things."

      "But not yours."

      "Well," he says, "this thing happened once." He puts up his hood, steps into the street, looks both ways as if he's shown up early for a gunfight. "If I told you anything, which I'm not saying I'm going to do, it would have to be really private."

      "You came out in an assembly!"

      "It involves a person you know."

      " Really?" I try not to look too eager, but I can't help running through names in my head, like flash cards. Crispin Pomerantz. Micah Kinzer. Jared Zam. I don't know what makes them seem possibly gay. Maybe it's because I don't like them. But Theo's gay, or he is now, and I like him. I'll bring this up with him, but later. "Who?"

      "Noah," he says, in a whisper.

      We know one Noah. He can't be gay. I don't know why. But he can't. "Are you serious? Really? Noah Duberman? Really? Noah?"

      "You sound like Fartemis." Fartemis is Theo's sister, Artemis. She's nine, and enthusiastic. "So forget about it."

      "Sorry. I promise I'll be cool. Really."

      He looks at me. He's going to trust me. "And when the specific thing took place? You were there."

      "I was?"

      "It was a day in gym, in eighth grade. Remember how we'd climb ropes and then drop down and do sit-ups, with a person holding down your feet? So I get Noah. And it was the time when—"

      I can't help myself. That happens. "When that bird was trapped—"

      "Dude? Is this your gay inkling thing? Or mine?" He doesn't wait for my answer. "So there he is."

      "So it involved rope, and sit-ups?"

      "That's the situation. The thing, itself, involved a ball. A testicle."

      "Whose?"

      "His."

      "What happened to it?"

      "Well," he says, "it dropped."

      "From?"

      "His shorts."

      "Wow." I wish I had a wise or insightful comment, as I usually (ha) do.

      "And do you remember in Citizen Kane? At the end, when he's holding the snow globe?"

      We had a Masters of Cinema class last year; we saw Citizen Kane, Wings of Desire, All About My Mother. "Rosebud. It falls from his hand, in slow motion."

      "It was like that." He waits. "Falling gently." He waits a little more. "With some hairs." He shuts his eyes and uses this odd voice, like Dylan Thomas reading A Child's Christmas in Wales, which I am forced to listen to each Christmas with my grandma. "And it was golden." His eyes stay shut. His nostrils move. I give him four seconds.

      "Golden," I say.

      His eyes open. "You heard me."

      "The whole ball."

      "It's a metaphor, you fucking idiot."

      "A metaphor for what? And not to be Literal-Minded Guy?" We have a Hall of Guys, stocked from our observation of humanity in New York. Expert Guy, Lacks Irony Guy, Literal-Minded Guy; these are just a few. "But there's no way you could have thought of the Rosebud thing when the ball fell. We hadn't seen Citizen Kane yet."

      "Wow. That's astute. I'd say you're ready for Brown." I'm not really clear on what the Holy Grail is, but whatever it is, it's Brown at my school. Brown, Brown, Brown, forced down our throats like broccoli, starting when we're still hitting each other over the head with blocks.

      "Was Noah aware of all this?" I ask.

      "Fuck. I hope not."

      "So you didn't tell him."

      "Well, no," he says. "It's not the kind of thing you point out, exactly. He just kept sitting up. And what would I have said?" I can't think of anything, which makes me sad; in all the time I've known Theo, which is all of both of our lives, I've never even had to think. The words were always just there.

      "And that told you you were going to be gay?"

      "It seems like it might have.


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