Date: Sat, 12 Aug 2006 07:09:26 -0700 (PDT) From: Joseph Smith Subject: Love and Death in Venice adult/youth (Author's notes: Copyright 2006. This is not a typical Nifty story. It's not about sex but about a relationship, friendship, loneliness, depression and grief. Emails welcome.) Love and Death in Venice Chapter 8 The simple life in Venice, Florida, could be extremely boring. My only refuge was the beach-with my toes nestled in the sand and the sound of water splashing onto the beach. My eyes followed the shoreline, watching others, their lives following the paths they had chosen for themselves...and what of my path? Full of detours, roadblocks and the mandatory forks that confuse and bewilder me as I have tried to imagine where the life choices I've made will lead. Then there was that inevitable curve that came out of nowhere and you found myself stumbling along, trying to pick myself up with some form of dignity left intact. There was a movie thirty years ago that used a certain tag line for its advertising. It constantly reminded me of how life should be lived. It read: "the quiet dignity of the human spirit". I was so taken by that quote that I put it on the marquee above the title when I played the movie. How I had struggled with the idea of a 'quiet dignity'. With my eyes closed, feeling the warmth of the summer sun, the subtle wind whistling in my ears, I realized that I had lost my 'quiet dignity' too easily. Chase has done what no one had done before and I let him do it. I followed him on this adventure to see where it would go because I wanted it. I wanted him in my life because he gave me a sense of belonging in life. His human spirit had been warm and loving. The gift he always gave was himself. He touched me in a way that only one other ever has. I worried that he would ignore the message in which I poured out my heart to him. The last indignity of a pained soul or so I thought. Brady kept telling me to give it time. I was impatient with time. At work, I would close my eyes and think about Chase. I would look up, out the box office window and my mind's eye would see him, leaning against the tree, smiling, waiting for me. I deluded myself with thoughts that he would drive to Venice and make peace with me. As the weeks went by, my pain increased. Chase wasn't coming, I kept reminding myself. I would see his name on my Yahoo Messenger list and wonder if he was on line. He told me that he liked his privacy. He would always appear as 'offline'. The weeks went by and I grew more and more anxious. I had to constantly check myself, fearing that I had developed an obsession. The Nifty story kept my mind occupied for many hours as I continued the spiritual journey of those young men, leading them to a destiny that I wasn't sure I really wanted. I wrote from my heart as words and meanings flowed from my fingertips onto the keyboard, hoping that by some cosmic accident Chase would read the story and find meaning and contentment from it. After two months, I couldn't take it anymore. With no words from him, I wrote an email. I told him that I had put my resumé out there nationally and still was having little response. I blew the head gasket on my Ford Escort and bought a pick up truck. It was a nice letter that friends write to let the other know how they're doing. It was unemotional. It too went with no response. I spent the next six weeks writing the conclusion of my Nifty story. Though I was pleased and happy with how it had progressed, it was time to end it and in a way, that saddened me. It had been an exciting journey for me. A dream I had always had had been realized. With the final chapter written and posted, I felt a sincere sense of accomplishment. A rare feeling, one that I knew I wanted more and more. A reader sent me an email, telling me how great the story was but that the syntax and grammar needed serious attention. I hadn't used an editor and had proofread it myself. I had missed so much. We exchanged emails and agreed to rewrite the story and prepare it for publication as a novel. The story that Chase inspired was going to be on library shelves, I thought. The day after I posted the last chapter, I sent Chase an off-line message on Yahoo Messenger. Dan: Today is the anniversary of my finding you last year. Remember we talked all night long? I haven't heard your voice in 8 months, or seen a written word in 6. You know I miss you. Please, don't leave our friendship like this? It means too much to me. How are you? Several hours later, the response came. Chase: Dan, I am not mad at you, nor am I upset... I just have a lot going on, and a lot of people demanding much from me... I only have time for so much, and I seem to find people who are needy... And I'm having to sift through my list of friends... I am sorry if I have caused you any pain. Finally a reply, but it wasn't what I was hoping for, and I turned a blind eye to it at first. Dan: Chase, thank you for writing. Just keep in touch. Sounds like you are doing well. If you get any time free, call me. It would be good to hear your voice again. I went back and reread his message. There it was in black and white. I was one of the 'needy' ones. Chase had put me on the list that he told me I wasn't on. He lied to me. Again. I felt that sick feeling in my stomach that no one likes to get. I felt betrayed all over again. Dan: Don't worry about me...I get it. And then I cried. I sent Brady an offline message: "I heard from Chase...I am done with him." Or so I thought. Brady and I had a lot of phone conversations about Chase. He listened as I cried on his shoulder, feeling an incredible loss, like a close friend had died. "You knew this was going to happen," he said. "No I didn't, not really." "Dan, he ended it. It's over. Move on." "I just can't turn it off," I said. "You're not going to turn off the love you have for him, but he did turn off everything else." "Why, Brady, what did I do that was so wrong and why does he think I was 'needy'? I asked, knowing that forever I would hate that word 'needy'. "You needed his friendship. You needed his love. You needed to love him. You needed to move back to Texas. You needed him." "I'm being punished because I loved and cared about him?" "Yes." "I tried to save him," I said. "He didn't want to be saved." "He didn't know he had to be saved." "I think he knew. Besides, how would you have saved him?" "By trying to convince him he could have God and also be gay." "You don't think he knows that?" "No. I don't think he feels worthy of that." "Let him go." "Brady, I'm afraid for him." "Let it go." "I still think he might do something." "You can't stop him if he does." "It will tear me up if he does," I said, fearing I would someday have that knowledge. "Let it go." "I can't." "I know." I began to wonder if I ever would let it go. "Dan, he's in your heart. That won't change. But you need to find someone to replace him there." "He won't be replaced. Just moved over for someone else." "That works, too." "Will I ever be over Chase?" "Hopefully, but not anytime soon." I never thought I could write another story. My editor told me to start another one. The weeks went by and I started writing again. It's a story of the first guy I had a crush on. It was the break I needed from the first story. Though we had begun the process of rewriting the first one, I got wrapped up in the new one. Each day I would open the wooden wine box that I kept my watches and change in and look at the ring, the CTR ring Chase gave me nine years ago. I thought of the reason he gave it to me in the first place. I took it out and placed on my finger. It was still too big. It was the only thing I had of Chase's besides my memories. I kept working at the theater, though I had grown weary of it after nearly two years. I realized with much disappointment, that it was at this location that I had been the longest in my career. My thoughts would tell me that I shouldn't be here. I should be in Texas with Chase. I should have been there a year ago. Christmas was coming soon and I knew I would be alone. I felt that I had one more thing I had to do concerning Chase. I got a ring box with the intention of sending the ring back to Chase. I put the ring in the box. It sat on my dresser for weeks until I got the nerve up to send it, and to decide that that was the right thing to do. I sat down at my computer and typed out a note for the ring. "A caring friend with a warm heart gave me this ring nine years ago. The warm heart has gone cold and the caring friend has been lost, like everyone I have ever cared about in my life." I had lost just about everyone I had ever cared about in my life: my wife, my mother, my grandmother, my best friend of twenty-five years after coming out to him, and friends along life's way. Since I have had so few friends in my life, the number of those lost seems unbearable. I have my son, my wife's sister and her companion, Brady, Dave and John. I'm not completely alone, but my inner family is shrinking. I didn't sign the note. I placed it in the envelope with the box and sealed it. It sat in my truck for another week before I mailed it. "Why did you do that?" Brady asked. "The ring didn't mean what it did before." "So sending it back to him told him what?" "That he hurt more then he thought." "You wanted to tell him he hurt you?" "Yeah, badly," I said, feeling the pain. "Do you think he's going to care?" "I hope so." "You should have kept it." "Why?" "It was all you had of him. The last piece of what you guys had." "What did we really have, Brady?" I asked. "Friendship." "He threw it away." "I thought you said it was because of his bi-polar disorder that he acted this way?" "I know. But this has been one hell of a long mood swing." I finished writing the second story. My editor kept getting on me about the use of commas and past tense words, things I tried consciously to work on. When he's done with it, he always made my work look good. He can unscramble the murkiest paragraphs and make sense of what I was trying to write. I really liked the way the story ended and I even had two female readers email me about it. I even got a request to post it on Awesomedude.com, which is strictly by invitation only. In November, a northeastern theater company expressed an interest in me. Finally I might be moving. But the process took months. "You should write about it," Brady said. "Why?" "To get it out of your system." "Is that the only way it will happen?" "Maybe," he said. "I finished my second story. I really have no idea what the next one would be." "Do this one." "I don't know if I can." "You need closure," he said. "Write about Chase and me?" I asked. "Yeah? I know I still ramble on about him with you." "Dan, you need to move on." "There's that damn word." "What?" "Need." Brady laughed and said, "See, you have to write it." "So I can see how 'needy' I really am?" "Maybe." "You're three thousand miles away, how needy do you think I am?" "I don't know. But until you figure some things out, you will feel that way." "You're serious?" "Yeah." "I don't know if I can. It hurts." "Exactly." "Brady, my first two stories were fiction based loosely on actual events or situations that I turned into a fantasy. That was easy. But this?" "You have to do it." "It's personal. I don't know." "Dan, whether you publish it on the net or not, you have to write it." "What if I don't like what I write?" "You don't have to." "Your constantly complaining I reveal too much when I talk to people. Now you're asking me to reveal this?" "You need closure, like I said. To finally settle what you had with Chase." "You really think it will help?" "Yeah, I do. Chase is in your heart. He's not going to leave. It's not like you're taking a knife and cutting him out; it's a way to finish what he started." The end of Chapter 8