Date: Thu, 12 Apr 2012 00:31:32 -0700 (PDT) From: BR Subject: two boys a love story part 9 If you're not 18 or not legally able to do so, please don't read this fictional story with non existent characters and situations which are not intended to resemble any actual persons or events. Two Boys: A Love Story Part IX It was quiet, deathly quiet in St. Joseph's Catholic Church as Mom and I arrived for Don's viewing. We entered through the front door and were greeted by two novices who showed us to the viewing area. Several people in black whom I did not recognize were speaking to each other in hushed tones. I looked around to see if Adam and Maddie were around, but I didn't see them. We went to the viewing area and I saw a closed oak casket surrounded by candles. Mom and I kneeled before the casket and then crossed ourselves. We retreated to the lobby and were led into the church. We sat at a pew on the left hand side towards the back. I looked around and still saw no sign of Adam, Maddie, or Sherry anywhere. I saw Rich and James and several other acquaintances of Don's that I recognized from the house. The rest of the people sprinkled throughout the church I didn't recognize. It had been a week since Don had died. Toxicology reports were still pending, but a preliminary autopsy showed that he likely died of an accidental overdose of a combination of cocaine, heroin, and alcohol. His blood alcohol level when he died was .30, which by itself probably would have killed him. His death was ruled accidental, but I really wondered if he had given up on life and decided to end it all in a binge to end all binges. Marco was believed by the authorities to have provided the drugs that killed Don, but they couldn't gather enough evidence to charge him with anything. The entire house had been cleaned top to bottom. Marco was absolutely devastated and moved out of the house. He was not at the funeral today, as he couldn't bring himself to face Adam and Maddie. It was discovered that Don owed two years of back taxes on his business, and was about to be sued for five months of back rent. His "estate", such as it was, was a tangled mess of debts, overdraws, and liens. In short, Don was absolutely penniless. Despite all of this, he never once missed a child support or alimony payment, he always made sure that he could pay those. The organ started playing and the service then started with the funeral procession. Two alter boys led the casket, which was being pulled on a cart by a sacristan. It was followed by the priest and then the family. It was then that I saw Adam. My breath caught in my throat when he walked in. He was dressed in a sharp, black suit with black polished shoes. He now had flowing long blond hair down to his shoulders. He looked the same, but was a little taller and a little bigger. He looked absolutely golden, and I was mildly tempted to call out to him. He looked grave and had a maturity about him that I don't remember seeing before. Behind him was Maddie in a black dress. She had matured into a beautiful and graceful young woman just like her mother, who I saw following behind. I also saw two older women who I assumed were his sisters Linda and Catherine. Catherine had her husband and her three grown daughters with her. Linda was by herself. During the service, between all the rites and the mumbo jumbo, the priest talked about Don's life. Most of the stories I had already heard, about how Don's father supported his mother, himself, and his two sisters as a professional gambler, and was away for months at a time. He talked about Don's efforts to become a professional musician, his time on a commune in Italy growing figs, his first marriage, and his estranged twenty seven year old son (who did not attend the funeral). I sat there thinking about how much bad luck and wasted potential there was with Don, and I really felt sorry for him. After the service we all gathered for the reception in the lobby. I was standing near the door with Mom watching the mourners filing out. We then saw Sherry and Maddie come out, with Adam behind them. They were all being given condolences as they walked out. It was Sherry who saw us first and the three of them walked right over to us. I hugged Sherry, and then Maddie. I then saw Adam there, with a serious look on his face and his hands in his coat pockets. I walked over to him and we hugged. I was glad to see him, but the circumstances allowed little joy in our reunion. "Adam I'm so sorry about your dad..." I whispered in his ear. He tightened his embrace a little and we stepped back and looked at each other for a few moments before another mourner came to give Adam his sympathy's. Adam accepted the sympathy's with a mature and gracefully stoic dignity. He seemed like a wizened old man in a 12 year old boys body. After a while Adam, Maddie, and I got a chance to step outside and talk. We all hugged again and I gazed at them both, they were so beautiful. "So how is the surfing, Adam?" I asked. "It's cool. I go out every day before school and after dinner. I don't really do soccer anymore." "You look really nice in your suit, Adam." I said. "You do too, you're dressed really nice." He said. "You're voice is changing, Buyer." Maddie said. "Yeah, at least it's not cracking or anything." I said. "It sounds deeper, it used to be really high." She said. "You look absolutely beautiful, Maddie. I really miss seeing both you guys. We used to have some really great times." I said. "We miss you too, Buyer." Adam said. Before Don died, Adam and I were starting to communicate less frequently. We initially were texting and calling, sometimes up to five or six times a day. Once school started we were communicating less and less. Adam, unlike me, was actually having sort of a tough time. He didn't know any of the kids and he was having a harder time making friends than he had in elementary school. He was tough and smart, though, and he persevered. When he started surfing he finally found a group of friends that accepted him, and he was settling into the California beach life as though he had always been there. As our new interests grew, our separate lives were becoming more and more distant. We were fading from each others lives, but we had both also known that it would probably wind up being that way. We had no choice but to accept that it's difficult to maintain a close friendship when your friend is 2500 miles away. We still kept in touch to tell each other what was going on in our lives, what was troubling us, and what was gratifying. We were both discovering, however, that the current people in our lives could serve that same function just as well, so our emails and texts and phone calls were becoming more and more formal, less intimate, and perfunctory. A group of mourners and family came out, and Adam and Maddie were soon surrounded by a crowd of well wishers. I retreated to where Mom was and we decided to go ahead and head back home to prepare for the wake. The wake was held at our house. Don's landlord was nice enough to transfer the lease over to us, so we had the place to ourselves now. The rent was a lot higher than it was on our old house, so it was pretty tough on us, but Mom made it work. Mom refused to rent the basement out, she wanted it to be our house, and it was. Mourners began arriving a short time later. I kept an eye out for Adam and sure enough, he and Maddie and Sherry soon came walking through the door. It was absolutely wonderful to see Adam in the house again. Almost as soon as Adam came in he asked me to go down to the basement with him so that we could talk privately. We bolted down the stairs while the adults mingled and tried to be as relaxed as the situation permitted. we went downstairs into the vacant basement and I turned on the light. "Wow, it looks weird in here without Marco's stuff." Adam said. "Are you mad at Marco about your dad?" I asked as I sat down against the wall where Marco's couch used to be. "Not really. I know that Dad did dumb things. It's not Marco's fault." Adam said. "I wish he knew that you thought that, he took off thinking that you and Maddie blamed him for what happened." I said. "I wish I could tell him too." Adam said. "You're so beautiful." I said. "You too. I think you're the best looking boy I've ever seen." He said. "So...are you...with anybody in Malibu?" I asked. Adam smiled and pulled a picture phone out of his pocket. Apparently Sherry finally relented and let him have one. He walked over and sat down next to me and showed a picture of him with two other boys his age. one had short red hair and freckles and the other had long blond hair and blue eyes like he did. "This is Tanner and Gary." He said. "Both of them?" I asked with a grin. Adam smiled and nodded. "At the same time?" Adam nodded again and grinned. I laughed, "Wow Adam, only you!" He then reached over and ran his hand through my hair and I ran mine through his. We then leaned over and kissed each other on the lips. It wasn't passionate, just tender, and it provided closure. We both felt ready to move on now. We returned upstairs, and Sherry immediately told Adam that it was time for them to go to the airport to catch their plane home. We all hugged, said our goodbyes, and I watched as they opened the door and walked out into the sunshine, as he walked out Adam turned around and looked at me. I waved to him and he waved back as he disappered out the door forever. I smiled to myself. I didn't cry, didn't get a lump in my throat, or feel depressed. I felt happy that I was able to have the gift of Adam's love and friendship, and I knew that the most treasured memories in my life would be of him, and would be forever. As time went on we sent less and less messages to each other, and got less and less responses. Eventually messages began to go unanswered. Then I discovered, after deciding to send him an email after four months, that Adam's account was deleted. There was no trace of him anywhere that I could find, it was as if he dropped off the face of the Earth. I looked up Lintronix online and found no listing of any such company having ever existed, I saw that Gerald Pipkin's Wikipedia article was suddenly no longer up. Eventually I stopped seeing any reference to Lintronix and Gerald Pipkin anywhere. It was like neither had ever even existed. Eventually, people from that elementary school that I would run would say that they didn't remember an Adam Fitzgerald, or even me for that matter. Eventually, the events of that time began to become murky and hazy in my memory, like a half remembered dream right at waking up. Also like a dream, the memories would recede and vanish when attempted to be accessed. One night, many, many years later, I was sitting in my den and staring at my computer screen. Suddenly, I started hearing a carnival calliope outside. It kept getting louder and louder. I started hearing crowds and carnival barkers and music. I looked out the window and saw that my back yard and beyond was filled up with a large and crowded carnival, complete with a big Ferris wheel, dazzlingly lit up. I put on my slippers and a robe and went out back. Right outside my back door was the carnival entrance. I entered the carnival and walked among the tents. The music and the sounds of the crowd were right there, but strangley distant and muffled, as though underwater. The people milling about were all colorless, featurless human shapes, permanent strangers. Suddenly, right ahead of me in the middle of the crowd, in an intersection between four tents, I saw Adam. He looked just like he did when I first met him, bowl cut, soccer shorts, white T-shirt with the Seaworld logo, white socks and sneakers. He motioned for me to follow him. He lead me through the carnival among the crowd. He then went around a corner and I followed. Once around the corner, I saw that he looked like he had at Don's funeral, with the long blond hair and the crisp black suit. I followed him around another corner and he had turned into the three year old Adam I used to see in a family picture that Don had in his room, with his Osh Kosh overalls he wore and the orange rubber ball he was holding. He motioned me at me again to follow and I went around another corner. When I did the carnival all of a sudden went dark and silent. I found myself standing in the middle of a bunch of empty tents with trash and debris blowing about. Adam was standing with a dim white light around him, as though he were standing under a fluorescent street light. He had on the black magician costume that he had worn during halloween when we went trick or treating together. I started to approach him and he motioned me to stop, and I froze in my tracks. "Buyer." He said, his chirping voice sounding like it was echoing through a great distance. "You know that you can only go as far as this, right?" I swallowed and felt a lump forming in my throat, and silently nodded. A gust of wind whistled through, blowing papers and debris around me... and Adam, my sweet, dead son, whom we lost to cystic fibrosis when he was twelve, was gone. I drew a shuddering breath and gave a little smile. I then realized that there were no longer any tents around me, and that I was no longer in my backyard, and that I was still sitting at my computer, where I had been the whole time. Just then an instant message popped up on the screen. It had no address attached to it. It was a simple emoticon, a smiley face. It was green and orange. I choked back tears as I put my hand on the screen, and the image faded and was gone. "Goodbye, Son. I'll never forget you..." I whispered. I then turned off the computer, went into the kitchen, and got a Coke. The End