Date: Tue, 20 Apr 1999 09:24:53 -0700 (PDT) From: bpell@anon.nymserver.com Subject: chronicles of St.Barnabas part5 5. Autumn Leaves Autumn in New England never ceases to astound me. I forget from year to year how beautiful it is-beautiful and sad at the same time: those lovely, crisp days when the shrill cries of small boys at play echo musically to the tops of the gold and crimson maples, turning the playing field into a vast outdoor cathedral in which the choirboys sing an impromptu Te Deum as the afternoon sun illuminates the stained-glass trees. I spent all these afternoons watching the boys at play. Not that I am really much of a sports enthusiast: I like sports in proportion to the handsomeness of the uniforms the players wear. For this reason I like soccer and detest baseball. Football is worthless, too, unless there happens to be a cute center-in which case I like to see him bend way over so that his tail is sticking up in the air with the hands of the receiver cupped against his cheeks. But we don't play football at St. Barnabas, I'm glad to say. I much prefer soccer uniforms, with their thin, loose-fitting shorts that reveal good legs so nicely, and which afford such tempting glimpses of boys' inner thighs-when they sit on the grass putting on their shoes, for instance. One day Everett Harrison got a charley horse in his thigh. As I was nearby, I nobly sprang to the rescue. The best remedy for a charley horse, as you know, is vigorous massage. "Hold on to my shoulders," I ordered, squatting down and grasping his milky white thighs in both hands. The whimpering, boy held onto me while I slipped both hands underneath his shorts and rubbed. And rubbed. And rubbed. I reached up as high as I could, so that my left hand was touching his bottom cheek, while my right was rammed into his crotch. My face was close enough to catch the lovely boy-smell of his secret regions. Soon the whimpering subsided, and little Harrisonsaying he was "Okay now. Thanks, sir."-Iimped away, flashing me his smile and tossing his hair out of his eyes, leaving me squatting on the field with a roaring hard-on. Speaking of hair, though school regulations forbid really long hair, as long as a boy can see to read his music in church and doesn't look like a fugitive from Greenwich Village he is permitted to wear his hair as he chooses. One of the delights of Everett Harrison was the trick he had of tossing his silky hair out of his eyes with an impatient, sideways, shake of the head. Now, as he made this gesture while limping off towards the sidelines, I felt once again a sharp pang of jealousy over the fact that Harrison belonged, heart and soul, to the history teacher. I wondered what they did together. But there were other toothsome boys to watch on the soccer field. Ericson was always a joy to behold, moving as gracefully as a deer. And Jerry Jeffries, with his great legs, sturdy and boyish, with a beautifully carved hollow behind each knee. And Allen Burns, whose shorts were always getting caught between the cheeks of his chubby behind. His characteristic gesture was reaching behind to free his shorts with his left hand. He did this with a certain annoyance, as if cursing his misfortune to have been given such chubby cheeks. His misfortune was my pleasure; I vastly enjoyed observing the trouble his rubbery globes put him to. Once, during a game of Squogball-a crude, boy-invented game played in the gym, in which the loser had to "assume the angle" for free shots at his bum with a soccer ball-Burns kept on losing to the delight of the others. After all, Allen's posterior made a wonderful target, and when he bent over there were always cries of "Cock it up, Bums," or "Come on, Burns, let's see you make it smile!" After the game, Allen came up to me and said, "Mr. Murchison, I got it thirteen times. I'll never be able to sit down again." "Let's see the damage, Allen," I said, and made him pull down his shorts and underpants. I turned him around and ran my hands over the hot, pink globes. It was hard to tell whether they were swollen, or whether that was their natural state. "I think you'll survive, Burns," I sa'd, g'v'ng one of his rubbery buttocks a pinch. "You've got the bottom for Squogball. In fact, your bottom is made for Squogball." "Thank you, sir," said the boy, pulling up his pants, pleased to learn that at least his troublesome buttocks were of some use. If autumn is sad because it is the death of the earth, it is poignantly beautiful just for this reason. One afternoon in late fall I felt this intensely as I sat in my high-backed stall in church, listening to the words of the collect-when the shadows lengthen and the evening comes-as the late-afternoon light streamed through the rose window and the lighterthan-air voices of the white-robed choirboys rose to meet and mingle with it. Then in thy mercy grant us a safe lodging.. Afterwards, instead of marching the boys back two by two, I turned them loose to run back to school, kicking and throwing leaves, the autumn wind whipping up the tails of their jackets to reveal their little bottoms. I settled into my work pretty hard. There wasn't much else to do. Besides, I was waiting to see what reverberations might follow my little fiasco with Georgie Candy. I still found it hard to believe it had actually happened. Was it possible to get one's rocks off just from spanking a little boy's behind-even granted such a pretty one as Georgie's? Evidently it was, and I was a bit nervous at first. I was certain Georgie had been aware of what had happened, and equally certain that, despite my warnings, he would not keep it to himself. Just how far it would spread worried me. Luckily, though, the news seemed to have been confined to Georgic's gang, Which meant Allen Burns and sometimes a strange little fat boy named Blake Toms. There were occasional giggles from this group as I passed by, and once I found a line of graffiti scrawled in soap on the bathroom mirror which under normal circumstances would have warranted a full-wale investigation. In this case I chose simply to wash it off. That was all that happened. Boys have short attention spans, and I was glad that the matter had been forgotten, or at least put aside. As for the spanking itself, I rather think Georgie preferred not to let the news of that get around the school. In fact, I aided him in this endeavor by excusing him from showers the Saturday and Sunday following our little session. I was not anxious to have his bruised and swollen bottom (if such it was) seen by the whole dorm. The days closed in. It was dark by five o'clock. The leaves were gone from the trees now, and lay in heaps on the ground for boys to play in, much to the gardener's annoyance. The naked branches of the trees were silhouetted against the lowering sky like "bare ruined choirs, where late the sweet birds sang." Walking back from Evensong on these afternoons I would kick the leaves, feeling dead myself. Then the shrill cries of boys would cut through the chilling air, and I would thank God that there were boys, that there would always be boys, for with boys there could be no death. Sometimes I would let a few boys come into my room for tea on these gloomy afternoons. They liked to huddle in front of my fireplace and warm their hands or fannies, and drink their hot, sweet tea. Even the most unruly boys grew calm at such times. I would watch the firelight play about their young faces, listen to their sweet treble voices, and wonder why boys had to grow up. Sometimes I would manage to get Ronnie in my room alone. This was the best of all, for we would then play our little games, which consisted of my playing with his cock and other parts of his body without actually undressing him. Sometimes he would have a small orgasm, but usually we stopped short of that. And sometimes we were interrupted. Usually I managed to hide him in my bedroom until I could get rid of the visitor, but once Max Sailer came bur5ting in on us with only a short preliminary knock, giving Ronnie no time to arrange his clothing. It was very embarrassing. I thought of making some fast excuse, such as "I was just examining Riley for jockrash," or some such thing, but I decided against it. I said nothing, Max said nothing, and I just had to go on the assumption that he had compromised himself sufficiently with little Everett Harrison not to try anything fancy with me. Not much else happened before Thanksgiving, when the boys went home. Jim Dodge broke his wrist in the gym. Blake Toms got chicken pox and was shipped home before he was able to start an epidemic. Oh, yes, and there was a caning. There usually was a caning sometime in the fall, as if Father Sayers wanted to remind the boys each year that the cane was not just an ornament, but something that was used on boys' behinds when needed. This fall the cane descended on the ample bottom of a boy named Bruce Branson. Bruce was an eighth-grader, a rather dull boy in every way, but possessing a fine and fleshy pair of buns. I had been quite taken with him physically when he was in my dorm, but had never succeeded in getting anywhere with him. I think if I had spelled it out for him he might have agreed, but he wasn't a boy to take hints or suggestions, and I had soon given up on him. I don't know precisely what Bruce was caned for; the official word was "misbehavior in the dorm." Whatever it was-a single offense or simply an accumulation of misdemeanors-Clive Lambert apparently felt he deserved to be caned, and Clive was not a vindictive sort of person. if he reported a boy to Father Sayers, the boy deserved it. Nevertheless, I always felt sorry for the boy who was to be caned. It was not only a very humiliating experience, but an extremely painful one as well. I remember once passing by the Head's quarters while he was caning a lad, and hearing heart-rending shrieks and screams coming from within. I was not present at Branson's caning (Clive was, as the reporting master) and I did not hear his cries, but very few boys could help crying under the cane-and Bruce, I was told, was certainly no exception. I was told that he bawled like a baby, and that there were six raised red weals on his broad bottom when Father Sayers at last allowed him to get up. Almost as bad as the pain was the humiliation involved, for Father Sayers made sure the entire school knew about canings by announcing them in chapel the morning before. Thus the boy was subjected to cruel jibes from even the smallest boys all day long. After his ordeal he was not left in peace either, for every boy in the dorm has his time-honored right to have the boy show his marks. It was a sad time for Bruce, and he was very gloomy for at least a week afterwards. It had been his first caning, and especially humiliating since he was an eighth-grader and had narrowly missed being a prefect. The long Thanksgiving weekend came at last and the boys were put on buses and trains. I went to visit my Aunt in Dedham. She has a son, my cousin, named Dicky, who is kind of cute, though only eight. I had a good time with Aunt Sarah, and lots of fun of a very tame nature with Dicky. I am not sure I couldn't have made out with him, either. He's a plucky little boy and game for anything. When I got back to school, it was Winter.