Date: Fri, 18 Jan 2002 09:18:45 -0800 From: Tim Stillman Subject: gay M/B "Look Homeward, Joel" "Look Homeward, Joel" by Timothy Stillman Having a bad head cold, runny eyes, low fever, jangling brain synapses, here on this rainy ice fall day in the middle of January, early morning, I slip my traces and bonds again, and go soaring back to a summery feeling. When I was young and thin as a rake, long brown shoulder length hair, pretending I looked like David Cassidy, back then, in a town in Kentucky, where I worked as a newspaper reporter, in the season of Joel. He wouldn't remember me for an instant, but not a minute goes by that I don't try to go home to the him of then. He was 13. He looked like Mark Lester, like Bjorn Andresen, he especially looked like Leif Garrett. If there was ever a Grecian lad who should not look into a forest pond, it was Joel for he would surely have turned into a jonquil. And I could have kept him and tended to him and given him bright summer sunlight all his life to come. I never touched him, my Joel, except in my fantasies. I wrote his name with my finger on the bus window every time I left him to go back to work in Paducah. He sent me his school photo, his beamish face, his golden long hair, his blue eyes like the future of love, face thin, high cheekboned, skin the color of pale moon milk, on the back of the photo were these words "Once a flippy, always a flippy." Flippy was a word I had made up to fit into titles of great works, like "Look Homeward Flippy," "Gone With the Flippy," and "Moby Flippy." His father was a university teacher. Joel was bookish. He was a crescent of light in a dark world that is now these long years later of such darkness there is no visibility in sight anywhere I turn. I carried that school picture of Joel in my shirt pocket every day to work. I felt it warm against my chest. I felt an actual heat radiating out from it. I kept it on my night table, touched it last thing before sleep, touch it first thing on wakening. He looked a bit askance in the picture, as though he was seeing something so ridiculous that he couldn't hide a small pale lipped smile. He looked as though he was restless, as though he wanted to get back to his books and his poetry. As though he was tired of a world far more less than he, but he didn't want to say it, was too polite. I slept with my memory of him in my garage apartment in Paducah. I jacked off so often my penis would throb, my left ball hurt. I lay in my narrow bed, while waiting for midnight when the trainman in his heavy work boots would climb up the stairs in my closet to his second floor apartment, then walk around above me for a good half hour in those boots, while hawking and spitting and coughing. I held my hardon, lying there, in my bed, trying to drown those sounds out. I, dressed only in briefs, and I pretended Joel had me in his hand and was smiling down at me, his right hand brushing his wave of hair from out of his eye, and he said, "Barry, I love you" his voice slightly cracking, like a beautiful ancient mirror of some grand worth, that you want so desperately because it is so imperfect, because it has gilt gold round it and is of much deep history. A musty mirror, fogged with the breath I pretended to blow in Joel's mouth as our tongue tips would touch each other. One time Joel came with me to Paducah an early Saturday morning. I had never been alone with him there before. He had visited me at my mother's house a few times when she was at work. Always before this at his parents' house, with them and his sisters nearby. I was so frightened as I picked him up at his farm, day killing nighttime, and we drove and talked. I felt the need of him that was never to be the need of me, the older friend who made him feel older, the Joel and me who were not there with us, and how I would rush forward in life heavily into whatever dimension I could conjure up in order to hide back there with him, the right Joel, the other dimension one, the Joel who loved me. We drove down the Purchase Parkway. The sun was hot and melting the roadway. The air conditioner was on full blast. I looked at him as often as I could. Silver slipper of a lad. Silver slip of dream where I could worship as any man must worship something or someone. And Joel had the key to my heart locked up tight forevermore. It felt then as though I was 13 too, in the car with him, other times I was around him. And even younger. Like when you're four or five and you discover Crayola crayons and you love the smell of them as you scrawl them over paper. I especially loved the smell of the yellow crayon that seemed to leave a Day-Glo after image on the paper. As though I was coloring the sun, making it what it should be all along. There was always the memory of that aroma when I was with Joel, watching his nimble fingers write a letter to the editor to my newspaper defending me when I had written a column critical of the then just burgeoning Jesus movement and the Nazi group think that was beginning to flourish in it. We sat on his lumpy soft dumpy bed, he with his back against the backboard, his blue jeaned legs drawn up, licking his pencil point now and again with the tongue that I dwelled in dream of licking me, while I sat on the side of his bed, half turned toward him, half turned away, and we laughed our way through his letter. The words were ultimately his, and such an extraordinary thing when the paper published it right under an upcoming column of mine. There was a photo of me at the column top. The only good one that made me look like anything. I look sad mostly. I look in love mostly. I look like a man who has fallen in love with a boy. I wrote columns about boys, always disguised, always just fever blister dream memories I made up, but my heart was there anyway if anyone could read between the lines. And so was Joel. And that one special editorial page. My words and picture. And his words and name further down the page. I knew then what "Ode to A Grecian Urn" meant. That day going with him to Paducah was the day of the beginning of the slow winding down of us. I had always kept my feelings to myself. I had never let him know. I had never given myself away. But of course I had. I had given myself away at every single turn. Joel was vastly intelligent. He always knew. And that day, early morning, sun bursting in the blue cloud veined reddish sky, I thought, we shall go to my apartment, my stupid little one room apartment fashioned out of one segment of what had once been a garage, and we shall go to my door with the wood scraped off in a square patch right under the three small frosty oblong windows, and I shall make coffee for him, and we shall talk an hour before I have to go to work. And I shall say Joel I love you, I value you, I want to just hold you once before I go, because I have to remember everything, every wrinkle of your shirt, every tick of your smile, every vein throb in the left corner of your marble forehead. I want you to sit on that stupid lonely bed of mine with me, and I want our arms around each other, and I want to feel the newly minted celery fresh crackle of you. I want to show you the place where I loved you for so long, singly, only this time I want you to be there in reality. An odd thing, to be driving down the Purchase Parkway (you had to pay a toll, there fore you purchased you way down it) with Joel in my car, when all the other trips back and forth to my home town fifteen miles from Joel's, were made on bus and my sad nights and lonely afternoons and disheartened mornings when I was totally alone, when no one had ever touched me save my mother when I was small, bathing me, dressing me. I was literally untouched by human hands. And Joel knew though I had never told him. We talked above the radio that was blaring out whatever was big at the time. I guess we talked of Kurt Vonnegut Jr. who was a huge counterculture hero of then and a very gifted writer still. Joel was my cat's cradle and in him I was happily caught, gratefully tied up. I remember the shadow of him as we would walk round his farm. I would remember it all too well, that morning of Saturday when we got to my apartment, and went inside. I asked nervously if he would like some coffee. And Joel was nervous too. He didn't sit down, not in the old battered leather arm chair, certainly not on the bed. He asked if he could walk around town with me before I had to go to work. I knew at that moment in that musty apartment with the air conditioner that froze up half the time and was rarely any good. It had frozen again and the apartment was a fly box of heat that broke sweat out of both of us like Persian spice containers that emitted a most human, most distressingly real aroma that took the place of the banana soft sweet smell of the yellow Crayola crayons I loved so much as a young child. He was an angle of flame in the yellow sun smash that tried to come through the brown paper shades over the window on top the air conditioner, he was smudged in a knife edge of unsureness, and he was so certain what I felt, and that I adored him... I would do nothing but adore him from a distance. It would never cross my mind, not really, to do anything else. But. I had given myself away. I had made things awkward for him. He had never been awkward before, always like a superhero to me, his plaid workshirts and his blue jeans and his work boots were part of a superhero costume that held my heart in check. SuperJoel with the three dimensional blocks of shadow illusion drawn behind the curving bright red letters of his name, with DC or Marvel logo at the left top of the comic book cover. So, forgive me Joel, I hurried him out of the apartment where I had wanted him to be, where I had wanted him to see in the plainness, in the cheapness, there were books that were him, there were dreams stacked up that I wanted to divest of him and make the real dream true. But he hurried out the door faster than I did. And outside, he changed again, he smiled again, he did not withdraw, he was clumsy one moment as we walked, then did kind of a little monkey dance down the sidewalk. I said, "Ah, Joel, there comes a time in life where you have to be dignified. What would people think if I was beside a boy who made such a goofball of himself?" Joel looked at me mock perplexed, he knew what I was to do, for he knew me more than I knew myself. So I in my suit monkey walked just like he did, as he joined in again. We walked that way for a quarter of a block, and we were laughing, and nothing mattered but the moments together. That day is a series of snapshots to me. Heat fried, quaking, world off tilt, axis forgetting smooth rotation. Joel coming to work with me for a few minutes before eight, before work began. We were the only ones in the newsroom, save for the editor, a perspicacious little man of perpetual red face with a cigar always planted Perry White style in his mouth, a little man always angry, always tenterhooked nerves. He was sitting in his cubicle in the center of the newsroom. The cubicle was glassed on three sides. He sat at his desk, turned his chair, to look at Joel and me. Joel sat on the windowsill by my desk. He draw his legs up and put his long thin arms round them and we talked of many things. But not the things I wanted to talk about. I did try to appear to be a big shot. I wanted to say look at this and to produce out of my shirt pocket the picture of Joel. I wanted to say you count for me and if you will just let me follow you about for a time, I won't make trouble, and I won't turn creepy, and I won't come too close to you, just let me show you how I held you in my arms each night in my room as trucks and cars passed by on the street outside all night long, how I put my arms around myself and held my chest and shoulders tightly, and how I rubbed my penis and felt it harden like cement and I crushed my balls till they hurt and I offered myself to you and offered myself to you some more, and when I lonely came, I always said, "Joel. Joel." But that editor, bandy legged, perplexed, sure of himself, caught in a corner of unimportance that he thought so important was staring at Joel and me, and I thought as I nervously dared him to think what I hoped he was, the same thought I had when Joel and I met for lunch with the rest of the news crew at The Little King sandwich shop, as we stood in line to pick up our meal, this dialogue from "The Hustler" when Piper Laurie says about neighbors' reaction to her coming home with Fast Eddie Felson, "Hey, I got me a fella." Hey, I wanted to say then, I got me a fella and he is Joel and Joel is the world when everything else is tired and alone and I remembered all the late night walks around this grimy old carelessly dilapidated town. Down to the water front. Through sleepy neighborhoods. In hot weather and snowy cold. Top of alpine feeling as I rushed to the Greyhound bus station to get the next bus home Thursday afternoon to my mom's house, and then drove to Joel's where we would sit on his bed and read and conjure and then I would go home and jack off in a frenzy. On my side. Left leg in the air a bit. I could hear Joel saying, "Going to piss like a dog, are we?" And we would crumble tumble into bed and I could bury my face next to his stair case of ribs and walk into the only castle that could ever be noble in the entire universe. The sun glinted impatiently embarrasedly (for it could not hold a candle) on his hair in the office that morning. As Joel sat on the window ledge of the wide narrow spotty glass that looked down on the street and the appliance store where I had gotten that rotten air conditioner, that I had had to use a company car to take home and then lug the thing into place in my apartment in all that crushing heat. My heart had raced for an hour afterwards. I always did things alone. I never considered asking anyone for help with it. It just would not have been right to. The newspaper building was old and falling apart in gracelessness. It was a place of the smell of ink, ancient typewriter ribbons, the presses and the heat in the back room, the smell of paste and other devices that went then to printing a paper, in the proofreader's cubicle. I wish I could say I was hard at this point. I wish I could say I defied all laws of logic and reason and stood from my swivel chair, kicked it aside, and took Joel in my arms, the small tender aching presence of Joel, and kissed him, put my hands to the back of his head and did one of those romance movie endings. For I believed in such things back then. Oddly enough, though I knew it's insane, at times I still do. Joel never looked in the direction of the editor who was staring death rays at us as the man chomped on his wet unlit cigar, leaned forward, hands over his paunch, studying us like bugs under a microscope. He always did that to me. Now he did it to the both of us. It made me feel good. Like I was one with Joel. I noticed that glare every so often and I wanted to put my hand on Joel's knee, so close to mine, just to show the man. I was to be fired later on for various reasons, but as this day was the official end of Joel and me, that day was also the official end of my job. I often looked at Joel's crotch when he was talking about girls, to see if I could tell if he had an erection. I thought it must look very small and standing straight up, and delicately veined like made out of marble. I thought there would be very little pubic hair and what there was would be golden. He was a shy boy, an intractable boy, a boy who had a rapscallion sense of humor, and I carried him with me on my night walks in this tired waterfront town made of the past. I carried him invisibly beside me and I talked to thin air. I was never lonelier than when I was with him those two years. I was never more blissed out in happiness. He contained himself, I finally knew what Whitman meant, and when eight rolled around and other workers started arriving, I told Joel where I would meet him for lunch. He hopped off the ledge to the linoleum floor that swayed back a bit behind my chair. And he left. Three words. And he left. And all the vast worlds of empty and hollow they contain. We met for lunch and we were friends. He smiled hi at me outside the newspaper building. Dream come true. He's here. Right now. Not just his picture and his letters which I treated like gold. We sat at one of the small tables by ourselves in the little room with the drawings of the cartoon characters from The Little King comic strip painted on the blue walls surrounding us in all that music and talking din. Nobody asked to be introduced to him, though all the reporters I worked with were there. I've never been good with friends. I thought I had one when I was a child, but he told me years later just in passing, like saying the weather's been good today, that he only hung around with me in July because he was forced to visit his grandparents then, and I was across the street, since he didn't have time to really know any other kids, I was it. Friends have said cruel things like this to me all the time. It imploded in me. I took it, didn't let on, but god how I hated him for destroying eighteen fuckin' years of memories with just a few words. Mid afternoon, it started to rain. A summer shower. I had told Joel about the Ace Book Store where I hid out as often as possible with all those wonderful friendly vintage paperbacks when publishers and covers meant something, little rectangular memories of pieces of my childhood and before me, and the proprietor who was nice to me then. Saturday afternoon in that newspaper building while Joel was outside, close by, not 60 miles away, was when time dragged the most. I had taken church announcements over the phone. Dreamed of fucking Joel. Dreamed of him fucking me in between those calls about church raffles and hot dog socials The incongruity of it was not lost on me. I wanted to tell him because it would make him laugh, but of course I couldn't. So many things I learned early on never to say to another person. Nothing doing at the paper save reading newspapers bought at noon from Readmore book store across the street, down the block, as the rain continued, got a little more driving, the skies got iron gray, the clouds moved in. The building's air conditioner only worked part of the time, so it was sticky in there, even with coat draped over chair back, even with tie off and shirt collar opened. As I remembered Joel's goofy sweet letters to me once a week that I lived for. Once I wrote a jokey column about a mouse in my apartment that I had made friends with. And Joel liked that a lot so he sent me a child scribble drawing of a mouse on a tricked up clipping of a comic strip where the central character's name is changed from whatever it was to Barry. I wished I could be my name in Joel's mouth, he made it beautiful and not stupid like it and the owner of it are, hidden safely behind his chicklet white teeth. I watched the clock hands on the wall tick immutably and tried not to think of his nervousness in my apartment that morning. How sad that made me. I almost cried. Could we ever get around it? No. I knew that then. At four thirty, quitting time, Joel came up the back steps into the newsroom with its oldness and its gnarled feel and the smudged cracked in places glass that covered those heavy hardwood desks. And he smiled at me, though the smile was a little worn, a little not him. In one hand he carried a paper sack of books. We scrounged through them as he knelt beside me, everyone else in the process of getting out of there into something still left of Saturday, how wrong it felt, to work on the weekends, a hold over from school doubtlessly. And he was near me. Why could I not have brushed the top of his head with my hand? Who would it have killed exactly? He said he had been to the Ace book store, had met the proprietor who was a funny sharp clever man. Then he told me of a store down the block that sold grab bag second hand stuff, but that also had a huge load of paperbacks going for ten cents each. I've been used by a lot of people in my life. They take what they want and then they go. I felt that afternoon I had done the same to Joel. I sincerely hope not, but there was a distance between us that was not there before and would never be bridged again. The air was dark and close and humid. It felt all wrong. The rain had let up. There was a feel of gun metal in my mouth. As we walked to the store that sold second hand stuff. I bought some books. One was "The Wolfenden Report" about homosexuality and the laws in England, said country which I used to give such a goddam lot about. Also, "The Man Who Loved Children," not what you may think, some kind of Victorian family drama that I never got around to reading, like the other books I never got around to reading because, you see, the world ended late that afternoon, and when my world ends, all the books and movies of the time end as well. Cordoned off. Never for me to forage around again. I've little left you might imagine. You would be right. Things felt poisonous that afternoon. I would not have been surprised to see king cobras sliding over the dark floors of that shadowy store toward me. . I had developed in the shop a killer headache and my stomach was becoming upset. Joel was pulling away by not pulling away at all. And in the car, going home, I don't think either of us said a word to each other. I drove him along the parkway, sick inside, fearful, wanting to apologize, but if I did I would have to tell him everything, what I was apologizing for. We left the radio off. The silence was tomb like. I down the winding dirt roads to his family's farm house, let him out, I think we said goodnight, then I drove myself lost as usual around the tricky twisty roads until I found my way out of the maze, a constant joke between Joel and me. When I got to my room in my mother's house, I took some aspirin, I lay on the bed, my head about to come off, and I cried for a long time. I had tried to be so good. Tried to be so normal. And this was what it got me. Ashamed that Joel knew. That he KNEW. I felt crawly with bugs. Though Joel and I were to remain friends for a while, it was all gone Though he had planned on spending a weekend with me in Paducah later on, he backed out. Though he had come to Paducah some months later still, he had not gotten in touch with me. He told me so in a letter that I read when I sat in the bus station one Thursday afternoon, eager scared forlorn, waiting to talk with him on the phone from my mother's house, to go over and see him like always. Casual cruelty. Scarred heart. I felt like someone had broken my bones, as I sat in that plastic chair, at the echoy buzzy busy loud speaker burred bus station, reading his letter, just his by the way mentioning of his having been in town last week, I felt as though the world would never have a sky again. One winter, when there was a heavy snow fall, heavier than normal, on a Sunday, our first winter, I was supposed to visit him, but I drive badly in so much snow and ice, so I had to call him and tell him I couldn't make it. My mother's house was large, drafty, always chilly in winter. Once he had come there, had looked at my book collection. I had put on the soundtrack to "A Clockwork Orange" as he sat in a chair in the living room going through my columns. When the record got to "I Wanna Marry a Lighthouse Keeper," I, sitting on the couch behind Joel's chair, tried silently, with everything in me to make him really hear that song and to know I wanted "to keep him company. I wanna marry a lighthouse keeper and live by the side of the sea.. maybe find a treasure too." People look strangely at me when I tell them the movie makes me cry. It does. So does the movie, "Circus of Horrors" because of the grand song "Look for a Star." Go figure. But he didn't notice. He seemed slightly disappointed when I phoned him that wintry snow morning that I couldn't see him that day. . He gave me that, part of his friendly crowd, and I did not use him--I DID NOT USE HIM. I know what being used is like. I did not do that to him. My plea. Hear me. After I talked to him on the phone, I went into my bedroom. Among the things on my bulletin board above my bed was a tacked up comic strip from "Doonesbury" in which a teacher, Ms. Caucus, is kneeling and comforting a crying girl in the snow, telling her that even though the girl's parents are taking her out of the school, they can still see each other. It was because Ms. Caucus, as the name itself implied, was too liberal in politics, that was all. I limited my sight to that strip and pretended it meaning what it did not. I pretended it being me and Joel in a snow world far away. I looked at the bright blue snow outside my windows. I went back to my easy chair by the cheery glow wall heater, and continued reading Irving Wallace's biography of P.T. Barnum, "The Fabulous Showman," and I felt good pretending Joel missed me. I tried to make him there when he was not. I almost succeeded that wintry snow blustery day. Because I like to think he was thinking of me at the exact time I thought of him. Wishing me there with him. We were to see each other a few times after the Paducah fiasco. But it hurt and it didn't count. He was growing up. I was going nowhere. So on this day of cold and icy rain, now that I have a cold, I take the time to blow my nose now and then, rub the water out of my eyes, and I think I shall never masturbate one more time, I think I shall never have a sexual thought again. I shall take myself away to a winter land where the snow and ice take pity on me and freeze my heart too. But. Thank god for memory. Damn god for memory. Especially damn god for his little jokes. I lived then and live now in the entanglement of Joel's thin legs caught up with mine. I lived then and live now in imagination of undressing him. Of pulling off his jeans. Of seeing him in his white briefs. Of his smile leaning over to me. Of my rubbing him hard inside the cotton covering. Of unclothing him. Of the wide eyed naked of him. Of pinching his tits. Of rubbing my hands across his excited bouncing penis and balls. Of touching finally the center, boy root of Joel. Of nuzzling my mouth against his belly button and blowing on it, making him laugh. It's all I have left you see. Everything else has been incidental and did not count. I loved him. I love him. It was such a gentle tender secretly romantic time. What could be called "A Sentimental Education." Now in Christ's revolving on a cross name, will someone tell me where the monster is in that? Pardon me, I feel a sneeze coming on. "These long years later, it's worse. For I remember it for what it was, as well as how it could have been." Rod McKuen the end