Date: Sun, 9 Jun 2002 23:19:21 -0700 From: Tim Stillman Subject: Tender Wild Tender Wild by Timothy Stillman "Why don't you tell us, lad? Why do you want to waste your life on the likes of him? Come on, boy, speak up now, and there's another cracker and more chocolate for you, then we'll send you on your way. What say?" I sat there in their little room, in the tiny police station, and I put my hands on my lap, my legs straight, my feet firmly on the gritty wooden floor, my butt placed firmly in that ladder back hard chair. I sat there and I stared at them, as though I didn't understand, as though I was a half wit that they took me for in the first place. Why didn't I tell them--this--mayhaps he was tender; mayhaps I liked to lie in the crook of his arm; mayhaps I liked that he taught me things by pretending that I was teaching him things and there was a wondrous feeling to that, that we were lying together and lying not to hurt each other, but to help each other; mayhaps he was the only adult I had ever met who was hurt and admitted it; mayhaps he needed me, and none ever had before. Da with his strap of leather on my butt, hard flick cut remove, then repeat the process; Mam with her hands red always, from the washing of dishes and the cleaning of clothes in the old wash tub out back, and her head always turned conveniently away while Da whipped me within an inch of my life, and me like a empty coal sack over his knees as he popped and popped me. So it was a sad hard tossed life the three of us lived; Da with his pipe and his scrawny body and his hacking cough and his yellow teeth; Mam with her fear of him because she was bigger than he and he never let her forget it either; for she was his escape and he was hers; and me, I was the botheration. There was always something wild and untorn about me that bothered them both, that bothered the school mistress too, and the parson--something in me that hadn't been broken in this harsh rocky land with the moors nearby; something in me that somehow fed on all of this rotten house and the rotted fallin' down barn behind it, and the old skies that always seemed like curdled milk even in the most molten summer. But it wasn't summer when I found him, the straggler, the wanted man, out in the barn, that late Fall night. The weather was comin' up an awful blower. The wind had northern knives in it, the kind that sting at a slanting angle especially your bare arms and face and ears and neck and prickles like the night knows you're there and you would just as rather it did not. The house in fall and winter cold was always sweaty, the kitchen that is, where we spent our time, save for our chilly little rockabye beds, all three so small, you'd think children slept in them, and perhaps that is not so far wrong; anyways, it was the kitchen we sat in and ate in and I did my lessons in and Da and Mam had their blowzy rows with each gettin' a little tiddly on pit cider and not lettin' me have but a small jar or two every now and then. At ten each night they left the kitchen and went to their bedroom and they dressed heavily for bed for there weren't much covers and what there was was pretty thin, and that was when I went to the barn with its hollow echoes and his piles of grass and hay and lumber for the wood burner that made the kitchen so hot, that was where I went to curl up in a cow stall, though we had not cows, the last one dying earlier that Fall, consumption and starvation and a lack of love and a lack of life and the ceasing of the compelling need to breathe and all sorts of other lies. And it was there in the cold hay and the smart sharp air that dove through the rents on the broken and filleted roof that I would curl up with my heavy jacket and clothes, in a fetal position, and I would do the dreams as usual. I can't say when I knew I was being watched, soon or later, but I buttoned my pants one night after I had finished, and the night was dark; a gale was blowing; the night was wild; and I knew I wasn't alone. I wasn't surprised or startled even to see him standing there in the moon splinters in front of me, looking down at me. Perhaps I thought it was just another dream, just another flight of eagles in my head, which was a funny thing to say because I've never seen an eagle, in person, or in eagle, or in a film or a picture or anything, so I got to conjure them as noble and as brave as I wanted them to be, which was a nice thing. Maybe I thought there in the drafts and the creaking of the boards, and the smell of the cold earth all shattered there around me like a pomegranate smashed to bits, that he was an eagle come down from the sky to shelter me in his warm wide wings; not that I minded the cold and damp mind you, I'm a tough boy, but still and all it would be nice to be protected by eagle wings that would sail me onto morning light more prosperous than that of the day before and the one before that. He was tattered, this man, as was I, as was Mam and Da and the place where we lived, and I knowed he came from the moors and I knowed he was a runnin' from something because he looked fierce, he looked like there was a deep kind of death in him that others wished him and he had begun wishing it for himself too. He was shy. He was shamed. He was scared. I knew, I don't know how I did, I just did, and I extended my arms to him and was embarrassed my jacket sleeves rode up so high because I hadn't fit into it for some years, and he trembled, and he fell like an empty sack of coal, the kind I felt like when Da whipped me in front of the wood stove in the kitchen; he fell down to the ground and the ground was sod and the ground was electric with shivers, and we held because we had nothing else to hold on to. There was a growl in him. An unintentional ladder inside his eyes that I knew I would have to begin climbing; not that I didn't want to, had no idea what it meant or how to do it; it was just something like this--he needed help and he held me like the world was not sure whether to spit him off it or not, so he clung to me like I had clung to no one before. My arms at my side; my dream having concluded, and sleep should have come round to blank everything out again, which was always what happened when I finished, buttoned myself and fell asleep on the little pile of ancient frail dry hay. I could sleep there till morning if I wished; Mam and Da didn't care. I performed my chores round our little bit of farm and that was what was required of me; that and the fortnightly thrashing Da gave me because I was the cause of everything and I had begun believing it myself. We lay there for a time, in discomfort, we held to each other now, I put my arms delicately around him because I thought he was an egg and might break and I knew he was on the lam from the cops and I knew he was on the lam for a crime that did not matter in the least to me, because I felt the same way; because finally you got to stop being scared and running inside yourself deeper and deeper, and you gotta reach out; because this was safe--the long arm of the law would end us; he would not end me, nor I him; it was beyond the both of us, and that was what made it safe--none of the ending would be our fault, and I think both of us felt lucky on that score.The walls blew inward as though taking a deep breath; the night and sky and moon and earth seemed to almost be pulled from their moorings with the black madness goin' on our there, and there was nothing in him but cold, and there was nothing in me but cold, and somehow together we made warm out of it, in some mysterious happy way. I hid him there for some time. There were berries and things I could sneak from the house now and then, but not much, and milk we bought in town with what little food we could purchase. We were all thin people, me and them, and my quiet secret friend, and we hid at night and he hid during the day and enough salvation came that late Fall, and we taught each other in the barn or sometimes on a windy heath with the sky all bitter and full of disappointment. I was the boy and he was the man. I never knew his name and he never knew mine. We were blown together by the gale like leaves clapping together and trying to pretend that we would have picked the other if the situation had been different, but we hadn't; and we knew we wouldn't; we were part of an accident, but then when you think of it everybody meets by accident and sometimes stays together for that reason too. I don't think I loved him. I know he did not love me. But we were together and his hands were nice on me. And he stopped trembling after a time, and I put his hands on me, and it was right good to feel someone else doin' it for me and likin' me for it. I think at any rate he liked me. He was a scarecrow man. Scrawny. Not very old but older than me by a long shot. He was a man who talked little and always seemed to hurt as though he had a bullet inside him that kept drifting to different parts of him, as though he had all the pain in him there needed to be so why did anyone want to give him any more of it? It was good to do the private thing with him. I was of the age that I could think of little more than my constant raging member. And though I knew my friend was married and had two children and was wanted because he was poor and had robbed a business and had almost gotten away with it except a cop happened to pass by at exactly the wrong moment for him and cosed him one but good with that truncheon they all carry so I'm told, never been in the big city myself, and he had to run and leave his family behind him. He had to move to the moors and live on grass and whatever little life forms he was able to catch and eat--gor--raw. And he was with me as though I had knitted him out of my dreams. I had always had this figure in them who knew more than I did, but who needed me like someone needs someone, like the old songs sound on this thick fat discs the old Victrola plays sometimes when Da and Mam try to pretend they're young and life hasn't handed them the greasy short end of the stick just yet. He was no song. Neither was I. But he loved to doff my clothes and he loved to listen to my heart beat and that in itself made me feel so warm out in all that dusty dusky cold where the land listens to no man, but goes on its own independent way, and if you want on for the ride, then get on, and if you don't, then 'op it, because it's no need of you. And in the day time, early morning rime, as I do the chores, and then rush off to the school house, I stopped by the barn and we kissed and he patted my back and I felt like I really had someone to come home to, not Da and Mam, who seemed like total strangers--if we hadn't gone and had you we wouldn't be in this chiggery mess would we you little ingrate?--Da's words, Mam's by dent of her silence as she was mending cooking cleaning clothes scubbin' me behind the ears doing all those things that I had to go and make her do and she would never so world weary and thin and crumpled together let me forget it either--and Da sitting in the chair at the little table, smoking his pipe and closing his eyes and talkin' to hisself like he always did, to shut up the world and kiss it goodnight forever after in whatever little marble forest he had up there in his cranium there somewhere--but my friend--I would come home to him; it was like we were married; it was not love, but it was a whole trundle lot better than Da and Mam had it, that was for sure. The little one room all grades school room was hot because the wood stove there was larger than the one at home and heated a much larger room far too successfully. Us kids would look out the window on the right side of the room, opposite the wall with the blackboard and the ill tempered teacher, every chance we got, and we got rapped knuckles for it too, but it was worth it, seein' all that gray wind and cold skies and how we wished to be out in it and be able to breathe the comin' winter in and now caught up in this wood box like chicks in a warmin' crate, so play time at noon after lunch was looked forward to, you can believe, but I looked forward to also my friend, the man who took me in his mouth one night and showed me how heaven could be, who showed me how bodies can be fitted together and in a world where it seems no one and nothing fits, they did, and it seems right, and all the seams of cold in the barn were cut off, papered over by us and by the mouth he used to bring me off and the mouth I finally got the nerve to use to bring him off as well. Mam and Da stayed out of the barn. There was little sense of discovery. They had a little potato crop and a little tomato crop on the other side of the house, and Da worked on a slightly wealthier man's farm a little distance from here. Mam was too busy with house chores though I never thought it took so much time to clean such a tiny place and always secretly believed she spent at least some time in bed, drinking her pit cider and remembering herself as young and free while the Victrola played on and on and time got mixed up. Well, time got mixed up for us as well, as we nuzzled into each other, and we slept together, and we delighted in making electric currents in each other's nipples. It was good to be with a man, not that I had ever really thought of it before. It was good to think that he was older than me, that he was already 14 when I was born. It was a curious thing as I stroked his hair, as I traced my finger down his soft hairless cheek, as I lay my head on his stomach and he stroked my flanks and stoked the fires that were in me I honestly didn't know I had had before. He was already in the world before I even existed. Therefore, I must have existed in him in some way before I was born and before he ever saw me. I guess you could say I wanted him to be my Da and my Mam both. I don't think that's so wrong. I had some friends. Not many. But some. But mostly I was on the outside looking in. All of us kids here were poor. All had patched and repatched clothes. None of us was terrible bright. The teacher took the job for whatever little money she could make at it and didn't overpower herself teachin' us much or teachin' us much of any importance. Not that we went to school that often, because we had to help out round the farm and it all ran on our timetable and not the school's. But Bright was a good boy and a friend of mine. And he was bright as the sun and he was nice to be around. And Tremble was a nice girl and she was pretty and always made me feel happy being around her. Or used to at least, but not now, not now that Bright and Tremble were going with each other and I was kind of left out holding the sack. We weren't friends as much as we used to be, and it did hurt me and make me sad especially at night, but I had less pain now. Now that my friend was here. He knew he should never say he loved me. He knew I would never say I loved him. Cause love binds a person and you can't knit him after that. Somehow it makes a person want to be an eagle and to take the sky home and never think of you again without rue and deepest regret. I didn't think that then, but now, years later, on reflection, I do think it and I've never told anyone I loved them and no one has ever told me they felt that way about me. So with my nameless friend, coming home to him, in the wild blows of snows of winter, rushing and racing my heart beating so hard and the wind so sharp and airless that I thought I was being crushed to death, me, singular, me 14 and three quarters, me rushing somewhere and not stopping to see the things around me or catch the occasional frog or polliwog, me, nobody and no one in a place where no one really seemed to exist, momentary spasms of human flame, cut off at the top and then gone, I raced through work and my studies, ate fast, begged ten p.m. to roll round yet again in the ages it took to do so, smuggled some pit cider out to the barn and we toasted each other and we were bare together almost all the time and winter cleaved us not apart. He told me once that I looked not unlike his daughter, at which I took immediate offense, but he told me that I was beautiful and just fine for his hands and for his lips, and I was most unlike a girl where it counted most and he would jolly me and we would laugh and I let him penetrate me once, but it hurt and he pulled away from me and we hugged and went back to doing the things we had fun doing. A school book I was reading at the time and having a devil of a time following it though actually it was pretty interesting was a book by Charles Dickens called "Great Expectations." About this convict loose on the moors, who saves all this money to give to Pip, a boy who saved his life and was good to him, so Pip could finance his own great expectations, for Pip was poor as a church mouse as was I. The convict's name was Magwitch and there were all these cases of mistaken identity and all that. But this escaped man was no Magwitch, no creaky scary old man. This man I knew was of the moors, like he was something really lovely that had blossomed where few lovely things blossom. We were one in the Fall and in the winter. In the cold. With an old horse blanket to cuddle under sometimes. It scratched us and rubbed us raw. Sometimes we did it under the blanket. Most times we did it out with no protection but each other. I doubt if we could have been anything to one another at all in summer or in a warm cozy room no matter how elegant. I would examine his penis, the lumbering largeness of it. He would examine mine, far smaller, with no hair and too tiny balls that I was ashamed for him to see, but he bent to me and took each ball in his hand--how warm it made me feel, how important and unique and alive finally--and told me I was endearing, charming, told me I would never be a girl, I would never wear a dress, as I had kidded him when he told me I looked like his daughter, that I would always be me and I should never forget that, no matter how they try to force me to be something else. That, he said, is when it is most important to always remember where you came from, who you are, where you are going, and that for a while--and this he said with forlorn sad voice and eyes as he turned from me a bit because he couldn't dare tell me any other way--I happened into your life, poor as that memory is, it would be nice if you would remember me. Then he said, please. That broke my heart and we made especially love that night, silent and secret as it was. The coppers had been to the house, Mam and Da's house that is; I no longer laid claim to it. The barn and my friend were where my home was. They had been several times, had checked the fields of stubble and wilderness a number of times, the barn included. And my friend always hid safely and far away but not too far, and he always came home to me. To Mam and Da I was always an inconvenience, and as such, after they had done their rudimentary job as parents, they were well rid of me until they had to fake it through one more day with each other and with me. I can't imagine them doing it. I can't imagine they even kissing or touching at all. I've tried and even now I can't imagine it. It would seem, if they did, that it was--unholy. Then the police came again. And they caught him almost in the barn. We had not been careful enough. They saw him push through the open back door as they came in the front of the barn. They ran after him. They had torn his lips from mine and he was running and they took me to police headquarters and I was silently pleading as I closed my eyes, run run free run away run far and fast and never let the bastards catch you you did the only thing you could do run. They told me at police headquarters that he had done more than he said, that he had done this and not robbing someone alone, and I refused to hear what they said; for it was quite horrendous, the way they looked when they told me, the world scraping me rawer than that horse blanket, making the snowy world outside filled with footprints, and you could never erase them; the snow would never go away; the footprints were there to prove you were not who you said you were; that you were forever caught and revealed in the footprints in the snow that was for time eternal. And I refused to hear the words. I heard their voices as they leaned over me as they made me drink my chocolate and eat a cracker or two. I never knew what they said. I still don't know. I only know he ran away and I never heard from or of him again. And now the most difficult of all part. The real rock bottom reason I couldn't tell them the information about him that I knew--and if he lied, then why would they want to know what he said about anything?--because I knew if I said anything at all, they would coax me into telling him what we were doing all those months. And that meant admitting it. And that meant to more questions. More humiliation. More chance of being sent to an orphanage which must be far worse than even being with Da and Mam. I did not tell them anything. I never did tell them. Because how do you admit what we did? How do you admit something like that to anyone at all? I just kept thinking, run run and never stop till the day you die. It was a verse a piece of scripture that I held onto for a long time. Even now. With the shame or without it, he was my friend and made me do things I did not want to do. Oh I wanted to do them at the time, I very much did, he coaxed me and forced me into nothing. And that's all I can say about it. To those policemen with their shiny black uniforms and their stupid looking hats, or to the alienist they sent to talk to me or any of them. That is my private little winter world. I've held onto it as long as I could. I wish I could now let go. But I can't see how. After some more scalding chocolate and another cracker they forced on me, and constant questioning, they sighed, yawned, and one of them took me home. To Mam and Da, to who I had some tall explaining to do. How very much I wanted to run away. How very much I envied my friend. the end