Date: Tue, 4 Sep 2001 06:37:14 -0700 From: Tim Stillman Subject: m/m young friends "You'll Live to Love, Another Day" "You'll Live to Love, Another Day" by Timothy Stillman It was the end of the last endless summer day before school started again and the sky had caught brilliant, hurling, waves of rolling flame. Reflecting its glow off the boys below. They were in a huge bowl shaped green meadow, the three boys, Tommy and Johnny and Dwight. They had run and they had tossed summer up and down and over to each other this season with its long light and its late days, until the time had run out. Until their eyes, so soon, would put their gray metal bars on again. Already the shopping with moms for new clothes and notebooks and Number 2 pencils. But it never seemed real until the sky turned flame on the last moments of the last day of wonderment that had treated them like gods. They were seated now, in the heat, in their shorts and cotton short sleeve shirts and their sockless tennis shoes. In the green grass high in this declivity next to a hill on which the light shown like horizon grown into campfire. Sweeping the boys away like they were to catch fire themselves. Be ashes and burn in the sky. A light to get home by. Tommy was the kidder and Johnny was the studious and Dwight was the forlorn. They were a perfect group. Their own perfect gang. Johnny could justify Tommy's practical jokes and Dwight could suffer for those jokes, so the other two didn't have to. Tommy was somewhat heavy set. His crew cut was somehow gray and silver, regardless of the light. It made him seem younger and older as an equidistant. As though he had neither years ahead of him or behind him. Just what he was right now was what he would forever be. His cotton shirt was orange with stripes around it, which, with his pouty little stomach, made him seem a human bumble bee. Johnny wore glasses--horn rimmed of course--and he seemed anemic, to Tommy's ruddiness. Johnny was tall and thin and pale. His body seemed to have come out of a large oyster shell one night when the rest of the world was sleeping and had not let him totally emerge from the sea. He read books, not because he wanted to, or particularly liked them. It was he was supposed to. When your dad is a Professor at a university, even if it was only a cow college the next town over, you didn't have much chance at anything else. Tommy lay on his confident back and he put his hands together like a maestro. As though he had been the author of the summer. The heart tick clock bomb explosion of three p.m. all the way back there on June 4, when school let out, and children ran like mad monkeys away from the teachers and their tired and eager to get away from it all too looks. He talked, did Tommy. He chattered. He made you laugh. He cracked jokes like: "What does LSMFT" mean?" "I don't know. What?" "Loose Straps Mean Flappy Titties." And Johnny would laugh at the joke and Dwight would pretend to. Johnny would laugh almost mechanically as Tommy lit up a Lucky Strike on which packs were the initials meaning "Less Tar Means Fine Tobacco." But forever the joke. Like a long trail of thin silver that Tommy rode on and carried with him far back there the other two of them. Raids and midnight frog gigging with summer air so tight and hot it seemed like cones of raw popcorn forced down their throats. And summer boys continually trying to spit out the hulls which were the material proper of summer to begin with. Which was why boys always learned early on to spit. To spit manfully. Because they were junior men and would hear nothing else about it. Johnny sitting erect, pulling a dandelion apart, as Tommy encapsulated all their adventures this summer, this trio of unlikeliest who had had the summer blue capped sky all to themselves or so it seemed. Who had had the train whistles of noon to run to and they to try to pace the train as it pulled out again from its water stop--faster chug faster chug wheels of iron and steel and imagination hammered into gold vessels to carry themselves out to the seas of the Midwest wheat and the golden azure canyons of Colorado and the cold napes of Canada and all the places that boys would love to see. Mounting dreams of panning for gold in the 1880's in the mountains where a boy can think and hear in all that clearness, the very deepest imaginings of his soul. And of course, being boys, they were interested in the contests boys are interested in. So there was the occasional circle jerk. With their shorts unzipped, here in their meadow land evenings. In the other recent nights, how they were coming on so late, and Johnny already had more pubic hair than the others. A thick tangle of it. His penis was hard and thick. Not that the other boys cared. Or not much. So they would see who could shoot silver into the brocade hot purpling air of coming quilt darkness. And Johnny was always chagrined that Dwight could come first with his penis so thin and so small even when hard. A little arch bridge that pulled to the right at the top and looked like a stalk of boy celery. Innocent Dwight who was so eager to prove himself this way. And so laconic about it. So stroke stroke sigh and stroke again, watch out everyone, he would say in his pale voice, and his little rainbow would arch liquid up and that she blows one more time. The others racing to catch up. Their eyes intent on their dicks. Their hearts in their throats and their veins of their dicks. What good then to be a boy if not to vandalize other boy's manhood in such a sweet innocent way? Jungle boys. With their jingle of change. Their delight in things to eat, apples off trees, and skinny dipping at the lake. The necessity of their bare behinds bright in the moonlight glades of their world. That was special and sacred and had room for nothing real. For real was too real. And real was what had happened so long ago already. So short ago. So it was best to continue in their own and each other's topography. If there were tittie twisters and if there were hard ons rubbed at the crotches of v'd legs in the movie theater, so cold in summer, when two women in a cat fight Western tangled in the dusty screen of street, exposing whatever they might be vaguely allowed to expose, then so be it. The stickiness of their Coke cups and their thighs and the joy of being wicked in such a serene state of mind. Whatcha gonna do about it, then? Whatcha gonna do? That had nothing to do with sex. That had everything to do with the fabric of being boys. Trees to climb and thoughts to soak in lurid colored comic books with the pebbly pages. Things to talk about. And dream silently about. But with each other. That was the important thing. So they talked, under the fire sheet of last summer night of freedom's bragging crescendo. Tommy played his hands across the sky, which looked, those hands, as though he were really touching it. Really making it catch flame and bleed red blood of anger and resentment and sadness that the clock had reached over and turned off another summer. And they were a year older. A year closer to the next thing which one day would turn them around and they would not be boys anymore. A curdling. A huddling. If they had only dared. Girls they dared a little here and there. Because they were supposed to, somehow. But mostly they had themselves and that was just fine with them. Tommy of white teeth and reddened and tanned face talked as though to himself, for boys are universes to themselves, anyone knows that. Tommy spread the world in the breadth of his hands this far apart and then this far apart, closer or further. He was a summer boy. They all three were. Hated winter with its coughs and whooping sicknesses. Hated its fevers that came from the inside of a boy. But now, summer, fever coming to a boy from the outside, that was a different drummer of magic altogether. Liked to run naked in the night, whether in reality or in dreams. Liked to stand on midnight moon dusted lawns, respectively, and alone. And clock up their bodies in the sheer surge of nothing can stop me growing-ness. And just look at the waterfall that is me now. Look what hangs off me--studman. Look how it arches and flexes and gets hard at one instant, not even having to touch it. Just at my willing it so. Not above peeing off bridges when no one else but they were around. A coil in their stomachs. Unreeling. Unloading. Hot and unbothered. Scams were up ahead. And ties round their necks. And jobs. Something unhinged would take them to that soon. But, no, not now. They would not permit it. As Tommy reiterated their standard summers in this their 14th year of life, Johnny mentally calibrated it to books he had read. Each segment of Tommy's story, Johnny remembered a book or short story to which it was similar. And it haunted Johnny that thing he had--that ability to remember so much of what he read and so little of the life he lived even when it could be as exciting. Writers wrote it down, didn't they? The parallels? To his life and Tommy's and Dwight's, that had been real. But it just seemed more important when his Coke bottle thick lenses, of course, read the dancing words across the page and implanted them in his mind. Never reality, that way to be. Huck and Tom swam naked. They were unashamed. Crazy Horse dived boy naked into the rivers of his long ago youth. The dimples of his buttocks glistening in the noon day breezes. His penis a hard comma to break the waves head first. How grand to imagine--to be--here in the clothing of himself and his friends and his imaginary friends as well. Where bullets were eagles and dreams were puppies frisking in their own dell. Where hands could reach out to someone there or not there. And find a rising adventure basking in the hot afternoon sun. A bell jar over him and his friends. Hot sticky close friendly. Where boys lie abed in the early morning hours. In un-air-conditioned houses. On their hot sweaty sheets. Their legs apart like protractor legs. Their cocks proudly stiff. Their hands playing that old black magic. Look at me, is what it's all about then. Look at me, and not be stunned and frightened that someone is. As the boys are strumming their bejeweled guitars. For everything is sexual in those years. Let no one kid you. If they say otherwise, they do not remember. They are idiots. And boys live in their dreams that turn everything into a tureen of silver gulls holding their little or not so little warm always watery squishy balls upward and tight to the scrotum. Tight and no longer hairless. Legs that push them into summer also push the coming manhood up into the bodies. That celebrate life and still brave and daring animals and still okay. But the joy of the sex rush also rushes them from what they love with all their hearts. For it is a cheat. It is a con game and the stakes are anything but penny ante. And when they find out--when they find out how they were rooked, it is far too late. Here, Tommy said, we forever banish the Brothers Three, Ron, Skip and Daniel who were bullies and who always gave the littler boys or the different boys or the boys who stuck together no matter what anyone else said such abounding grief. And Tommy and Johnny and Dwight at the stream on the top of the mountain that was now casting its shield of late late afternoon early evening summer night on them, a preview of what was to follow. When they had been at the stream up there, at the first of this summer, the Brothers Three had waylaid them. But Johnny got the goods from reading about Robin Hood and had helped Tommy fashion some great battling rams that the boys were never without wherever outside their homes they went that summer. Just in case of a re-match. Huge heavy staffs with carved ram's heads in detail and perfection on either end. Okay, they were just fishing poles, but still boy imagination can do a lot with mundane objects. As the three had picked up their weapons and waved the wind of heat and mites and mosquitoes and chiggers at the three rough tough large gawky flat eyed flat thinking Brothers Three. Tommy of course scrappy and looking for a brawl, but there had been Johnny and Dwight too, swinging the poles, there was a little scroll work on them--honest--designed by Tommy from Johnny's specifications learned in the land of Nottingham on paper at the library one lazy Saturday bee kissed afternoon, with the boys all serious around in this place where they conjured with their minds and fishing poles turned taffy and thick and stalwart and massive as could be. All but Tommy, scrappy pugilist supreme, but our other two heroes, swinging the poles like sissies, eyes closed, arms turning round, poles out in front of them as though they were joy sticks of a plan that was turning all spirals and sprints in the sky of blue plate, before crashing hopelessly helplessly to the ground. But the Brothers Three running away, shouting, afraid, banished. It was possible the Brothers Three had been laughing their asses off at these defenseless wusses and had shaken their hands at them, dismissing them in the cruelest manner, not to waste their time with these three girls any longer. It's possible it was that way. But-it-was-not-so! Cause Dwight, Johnny and Tommy had won--they-did-it! And the Brothers Three were never to bother them again. The victors might have been three misfits, Tommy the most misfit of all. Because he was the cliche he was supposed to be. And they couldn't forgive him that. Childhood demands complexity. Know it or not. To others-- Little Tommy who had once been thrown naked out of the locker room after gym class. Who had banged on the door. Who had ducked behind bushes. The tennis courts across the street saw him. The trees saw him. The sky too. And a car that passed by--Tommy closing his eyes. Can't see me. Then I can't see you. Running Bare, a hit song at the time. Running Bear it really was. But not in this instance. Who had felt eyes on his little pink white fat behind. Who had put his hands around his genitals. Who was so red in the face. Who darted, zigged in his mind, and zagged through the school yard, who had had to crawl behind bushes under the classroom windows. How awful to be caught out there all bare. His little zinger getting dirtier and smaller with fear all the time as he slinked along the ground, like a little boy snake. What are you doing to us? it seemed to ask him. You're making a fool of all of us. His body inside hot like electric coils of a wall heater fighting out the walls of winter. He knew the laughter was in the spring hot breeze. He just couldn't hear it. That made it worse. The terrible hot still period of silence that encapsulated him. Till he found a door open to a basement stair steps. Then there was the sneaky duck and cover, he in a corner. Doubled into a comma on the cold concrete floor. In the dark. Waiting for the school bell to ring. Waiting for everything to empty out. And he there little chubby boy with too much mind and too much chutzpah who couldn't figure out why he had not thought of this master torture first. And finally, finally making it through to the gym, running like lightning, bare feet slapping on the hard wood floor, dick dangling in front of him, showing him the way, and then into the locker room and donning his clothes that had been left scattered on the floor in the wet smelly room--why didn't they take his clothes with them?, schmucks! Sinuous, circly, scared, heart making drum beat. Slithery feeling and a cock that would not forgive him probably, hiding its little red head in shame. No one around in the school to see. No one in the locker room. Not so's you'd know. Some great plan! But they saw, regardless. They saw and their words pricked and their fat mouths laughed and their barbs soaked in vinegar were slashed into the cuts that all of this had caused. Because this is how people, kids especially, kill undesirables. Plain and true. The jokes that followed. The eyes that had seen him without his knowing it from windows where teachers droned unawares, those eyes had mouths directly under their noses, and those mouths would never let him live this down. The Brothers Three had the most fun especially. His friends though never mentioned it. Never embarrassed him. Let him lead in the wanking contests now and then, and were quick to tell him how impressed they were. That then was the purpose of friends. Tommy didn't understand why that was such a hard thing to figure out. Little whirrings inside that narrow flat skull that spoke its own imaginations through teeth and tongue to Johnny who fashioned the words, the inspirations into glass blown bubbles of his own and thus lengthened and populated them with the right frisson, the right spin, the right persons of fantasy villages that dumbhead teachers who thought they were so smart, Old Cromedome for example, never had a clue about. Thus making The Nomenclature Gang (Johnny's idea--no one cared what the name meant, it just sounded so great!) the top gang in school, when they could not have a gang at all, because they weren't in the official groups and therefore were not really seen as to exist. But they had to exist because they were the stars of the school, which of course made no sense at all. But that's how it goes in a kid's world from day to day, of pancakes golden in the soft summer morning at Dungan's Diner and coming home right after, to fill up on breakfast with family, as the summer day stretches so longingly and languidly out before them. All the plates filled and all the baseball gloves ready. As Johnny held their group baseball glove smelling healthily of great doses of linseed oil that made the leathery skin soft and supple, as he sat with the other boys this final night of the world. As he bounced desultorily the Spaulding baseball with some of the stuffing knocked out of it over the years, raggedy and grass summer stained over the long months, in the glove's well worn creased leather, boys' supreme rise. And Johnny who didn't know a thing about baseball anymore than did Dwight or Tommy did, would watch the games sometimes at Tommy's home on TV of a Saturday afternoon, and be lost in the logic of the thing, the somehow poetry rhymes of the slow hot day play, the way it was all done on a fast curve or a descending sleight of hand parallel that was half out of sight and just caught little tendrils at the edges of your eyes. So you had to think, what just happened? But you never dared ask. That would give it away. They just knew they were in the presence of something--important. For it was right there in front of you on the black and white Admiral set, with the small screen replete with the feel of cheering people on bleachers, people hot dog stuffed and Coke and Beer downed happiness. Their eyes and hearts cast wide on the field and the bases and the players who somehow seemed yellow sun essence more than men. With the bat thwacking the ball out to center field or left or right or over the fence with the advertising signs on it, to the tunes of the cheering screaming mob-- home run! The boys in the living room getting caught up in it as well, cheering too. Drinking their own Cokes. Eating their own hot dogs. Mirrors of what they saw. Always. They thought then they could always get by with that. A game that managed to bore them and energize them at the same time. Being with friends watching the mathematics, somehow, of summer played out before their eyes. Could there ever be a better time than this? And that bothered Johnny, especially, as he and his friends sat back on the soft pink covered sofa, the boys lined up like ducks at a shooting gallery on the sofa that was perpendicular to the TV so you had to look at the set from the side of your eyes or turned catticornered. He loved these guys with him. Loved Tommy's getting so caught up in it. Loved seeing Dwight shrug a little, he at the far end of the sofa, lined up to their interest in what they were watching. Or Saturday night, ten thirty, the times they watched the monster movie, here. For this TV set had the best picture. And boys know what they like. That other rite of passage, Chiller Theatre. Dwight was at the end of the sofa closest to the TV, for horror films of any kind frightened him terribly, thus the reason he was closest to the set at these times. With Johnny was in the middle, hunkered down by the leverage and paleness of Tommy who laughed a lot at these movies. Maybe a bit too much. Like three men in a tub, drinking Cokes Tommy's grandparents had furnished them with, as well as eating chips and sherbet. The ambrosia of summer. The royal rings of the Coke glasses leavings on the table top in front of them and the giggling and feasting and stories and laughing out loud for no reason, which is the gift, the crown Mecca, the bedecking of childhood. They were a happy group. Save for Dwight. He was sad pretty much all the time. He didn't know why. No one else did either. He was one of those kids who needed to be protected. Though he never knew from what. He even jacked off sad. He would cry when alone late at night. He would thrust his penis through his shorts and he would stroke it. Thinking of Tommy and Johnny in ways he shouldn't have. Felt badly about. The others were just boys playing boy games. But there was something about Dwight that was like he was going to fall off the edge of the planet so he had to remember everything. So, when he came alone in his bed, he was more alone than anyone in the whole solar system, crying help me, oh god. Just that. And nothing more. Though all were forlorn this night. The red was not ruby. The world was not going to burn up and destroy forever the hoops of school they were in a matter of--jeez--hours, minutes, mere seconds--going to have to dive through for another goddam nine months. When life was no longer their friend. The red was going away from the roof of summer and purple was coming in. Not the royal coats of flowers and the nights when the boys ran behind the bug spray truck, because in those days, no one really knew, save for Johnny who had read "Silent Spring." But running after the bug spray truck in all that thick sweet smog and fog was for him yet another childhood ritual. One he threw over facts for. A game. A love. Like fighting in the trenches of WW I in the Battle of the Marne. All the rifle fire round him and he shooting off round after round himself. Bodies collapsing like clay men all about him and he bayoneting some who would not stay dead even with their grievous bullet wounds and their entrails hanging out and their heads half decapitated from their blood gouting neck stumps. Tonight, there was still, if measured by just the hot weather, summer to go for some time. Tomorrow was only Sept. 1. There was the county fair the end of next week and the beginning of the next. School took off one day, always a Wednesday, to go to it en mass. And the kids went at night and stayed as long as they could in that marvelous gaudy tacky place that was the only country they knew of that moved around. Hitched its skirts up one dark night and wheeled away to somewhere else, to begin again. It never made sense that it always came when school started again, as kids were their biggest customers. But, as Dwight had said often, that was the orderly stupid way of the world. Johnny said order is not a bad thing, it should just be adjusted into focus a bit more. And Tommy said last one out of his clothes and into the creek is a dirty rotten egg. Then all was forgotten. The delights played yesterday or the day before. Not tonight though. Already even this young, the memories counted more than tomorrow. But the game. The game. The doffing and running and falling. And clothes exchanged for skin and even shy Johnny and shyer Dwight jumping in, always falling behind Tommy who always dived. The delight of bare skin out in the glowy sun umbrella The delight at pushing and splashing and ducking and waves of colder than bitter winter water that slapped their chests, tightened their tits, shrank their balls, and giggled them to boy tricks of exceeding venture and mirth. Prongs sprung. A willow branch hung on each erection at a time. The hard boy cocks bending not. Supreme and strong and forever. The boys in their watery clothing. Coming out of the sea like mythological gods. The sea that burbled around them and made them more naked than any clothes doffing alone ever could. They were elemental in it. The sun danced the waves. And far places like China called. These puppies of summer. Even though the creek was shallow and there were enough stories about boys diving head first in a creek or pond and breaking their necks. Tommy knew though. Tommy always knew. He was a child. They were all children. They would never age. They would never break their necks in the creek, none of the other two really really believed that could happen to them. It was just precaution was a part of their make up. But they would break their heads on the creek flow of school, starting tomorrow. Each had classes he hated, that he couldn't understand. Math or English or science of Latin. All of it rashes and eczema and mumps and diphtheria and summer ending and cold winds blowing past brick gates in yards of damp black where there were no dogs to frisk with of a summer afternoon. Dogs bounding and bouncing up and down and yapping in the yards of boys who rushed home from the brick and cement and red dust buildings of learning, to rush pell mell to their very best squiggly happy dancy canine friends again. Dwight watched his human friends now. From a distance he still didn't understand yet. He remember how they flashed in the summer sun. How they had their day and were living sculptures of childhood. They were, he believed, simply perfect. And they let him be there too. With them. They asked for nothing. Everybody else asked for everything. And did not care if he gave it or not. So he found he had to give more and more. One day there would be nothing at all left to give. The rubber glove of Dwight would fall. And autumn would find itself alone without him. Would it, he wondered, care even? But that would be one day. Not yet come. Belief then was everything. Regardless. He too, like Johnny, was sitting erect. He too was pulling, not a dandelion apart, but a leaf apart. He watched it crumble in his hands. He took it to pieces as though he were intent on a scientific medical examination of its thin weak so weak pencil lined black skeleton. He looked at his friends. They were busy forgetting the summer, already leaving behind them the taste of lime sherbet in the hot night as they watched old horror films on TV in the hot air fan blown un air-conditioned house of one boy's or another's. Forgetting the tasting the cold and bracing and lively taste bud salutes on their tongues. The swallowing the sherbet which had come from a carton with rainbows painted on it, so Dwight always thought eating any brand at all of Sherbet, Borden's was the best, was like climbing up to the sky and eating rainbows. Just letting them waver into his mouth. Just letting them flow into his mouth. Rainbows. Or rainboys, Dwight thought now. Dwight the Quiet. But even if that was not what he was called by his two friends, even had it not rhymed, he would have been a quiet boy anyway. Gathering clouds white or dark. Secretive. Kept to himself like he forgot to have an outside. Still and brooding. Always at a distance especially when he was close up. Diffident. Difficult. Alone. He scared others because they thought it might be catching. So did Tommy and Johnny. He scared them. But he was their friend. In the world of boys, again, go figure. He didn't scare them at all. In other words. "It's been good," Tommy said, now sitting up straight, himself. "Our summer. And Fall is pretty neat too," Johnny was saying, trying to convince himself, in short, sharp almost flinty flings of little words and Johnny rarely used little words, not that he was a smart ass or a braggart, he just didn't like to show off. But he thought what he had once read and deemed it here appropriate--"cool and cold and leaf brittle and winds and dark skies and ice skating and cocoa after the long run home." The words like October late, come early to them now. They made Tommy shiver. Gladly somehow. Gladly as though there had been a sea change. As though gradually and too quickly, Tommy was growing weary, just a little bit, of summer and doing the same things year after year in that season. How many times could you poke someone's naked rear as they dived into the creek? How many times can you dissolve in crinkly giggles before you were dissolving only in the memory of how they used to be? How many times could you pretend that you still cared about wanking off with the guys? How many times could you feel good because you pissed farther than the others? Or stripping at the creek and measuring your new pubic hair against that of the others?--or of sweating 24 hours a day all through it till finally mid or late fall arrived. Like he was in harness. Pulling a wagon. Like he was a mule. And summer was the burden he had to trudge on with. It made no sense. He jerked his mind away from it. He wanted just once before he croaked, to hold someone softer than he was. He wanted to quit smiling goofily when he came last. Pretending it didn't matter. Cause it damn well did.. It was no longer a magic circle. It hurt him sometimes. He had no idea why. It just did. And sitting with his naked butt on the hot green steamy grass along side the naked butts of Dwight and Johnny made him feel a longing to be away. A longing to see different scenery. This map had been run. He had excavated the all of it. He had grown tired. And this scared him immensely. He told himself he was getting to be as big a nimrod as Johnny. But then he remembered those huge battering rams he and Johnny and yes Dwight too had used to fend away the Brothers Three, the Sheriff's men in other words, while the poor benighted peoples of Sherwood Forest cheered them on. And he thought, Johnny you're okay. He started to think about Dwight and then changed his mind. It was all gone now. They were having their final summer in their life. They had tried to hold it together this summer. But could not. It was a loser's game. And the night, the world, was far bigger than they would ever be again. How could anything be sadder than that? The dark was putting out feelers for the boys. It was almost all dark now. Magic tricks and smoke and mirrors and magic lantern shows and the night had come when a moment before, a second before, it had been brilliant shadowless summer like a wondrous sea of green stretched out for them, and only them, to swim in. Tide receded. Water gone away in the moon light of a moon that hadn't come yet and it was already so dark. They were silent a long time now. Johnny didn't know what they would remember. What had been important and what had not. He was losing his bearings. It felt like death. Everything dissolved. Everything eased back. The clamps were loosening. Prison, just up ahead. It was easier to put summer aside, like in canning jars in "Dandelion Wine," easier just to take summer out every now and then to remember and then put it back in the jars where it could be contained. Where it would contain itself without a boy having to throw his life away, his memory back, trying to hold to what was not possible for the jelly heart or brain to truly remember. Johnny's thoughts became more adult. More and more often. Damn. How to stop it. You can't. It is the fault of our mental abilities, the fault of our fast changing physiognomy, the fault of how things are laid out. Summer comes sun rise. Summer dies night. Autumn comes on a little less bright of light and life and then winter up ahead and you forget there was once hot acrid tasty butter thick summer sunlight at all, because it's easier that way. That way you don't have to go mad trying to hold on to your integrity. But Johnny said, "I'll miss it, anyway. Summer and all." Then thought, they'll weave together a new one for us next year. But then again, no they won't. Not for us. And we won't think about the rest. Because Dwight was always far behind there and really didn't count for that much. We liked him all right but he was more of a hanger on, riding his inferior off brand bike, it and he, so wobbly and unsure, struggling to catch up with us, trying to catch up to our sleek palomino Schwinns. It was just that no one else would take him, so we did, in spite of, in kindness, but mostly because it just for some reason or another had to be. And now we are beginning to find the waters clearer. The forest less dense. We look at it straight ahead, to be sure, but we see less and less, Johnny thought, and perhaps said, we're becoming adults and that god fuck it all to hell is how the game is played. Tommy was standing up now. Brushing the grass and dew and dark land off his shorts. Giving a hand to Johnny, who did the same. They stood awkwardly side by side, not looking at each other. Behind them, Dwight too stood and he looked at them and he wanted to look at them forever because he was forgetting too. It was all a land of nodding acquaintance. And they were lucky if even that would stay with them a little time to come. All the countries of it. Tommy shrugged his shoulders as though throwing off a particularly encapsulating minute. And began walking off the meadow, Johnny a little behind him. Mimicking Tommy's shrug. Their good bye to summer. But then that was what Mason jars with air holes in the lids for summer lightning bug catching and placement and freeing again was for. Dwight looked after them. He looked after them until they were only shadows within the shadow of the night and it had swallowed them up totally. Or had swallowed him up totally. He walked a step or two. Stumbling. How the hurts come. No Band-Aid for this falling off the bike and scraping his bare knees. Not the cuts that would only get more cruel. He held out his shaky south paw hand just a bit--not so's you'd notice even-- to the sky that could no longer be seen. And he remembered playing baseball with his friends, just catch between him and Tommy and Johnny and occasionally one or the other lobbed a soft throw to him, the sissiest of the world, Tommy would some times say to him, smiling, making Dwight smile too in spite of himself. Tommy bringing the world up close in times like that, the catchers now at the edge of Dwight's eyes, but once, right in front of him--the cheering crowd, the long distance over the Clabber's ad posted section of the fence, and Pee Wee Reese's and Dizzy Dean's voices going hysterical with sheer joy of boyhood ecstasy, "Did you see that, ladies and gentlemen? My lord, did you just see what happened? That's for the books. That is for--the--books!" And that was how summer Saturdays had gone. And this was how the last night of the summer world went. A bit different this time. A bit deeper. More biting. But just a bit. And Dwight standing lonely in a lonely dark night in a meadow that maybe was not a meadow any longer at all. Dwight, who had had a certain illness early this vacation. Just a little thing at first. Be over it in a day or two. But not to be. Dwight who was taken away slowly, eaten away slowly by time and his fading, failing, paler and paler body until his friends could no longer stand to visit him. Death had happened and Dwight was cut off from them. They had sat like statues at his funeral. The funeral home smell of pain and sick aroma flowers and the hush of cold like in a grave, all of them there, themselves. Kids don't die. They don't. That is reserved for grandmothers and grandfathers and other people, strangers, of crepe paper skin and eyes that look too weakly at the world and can't remember it, so they don't count. A million years up the line. Not a boy who died, wasting away. Cold face and colder hands. A body like a husk of a snake on his bed. Melting to the skeleton so lewdly inside. Died in hot summer July noon Saturday. Pasty and distant and dusty, like an old book opened to the hot winds and the dry deserts of the West. Flaked off and words dimmed and diminished as the pages burn in the sun and the print forgets and is dulled and is gone so soon. So irrevocably. Summer got inside him. The sun was swallowed in his mouth and it burned him up alive. How do you explain such a thing? You don't. You hide from it. Like Tommy did when he was pushed naked out the gym locker room door that day. You close your eyes so you can't see it and it can't see you. If he had broken his neck, diving in the creek. If he had gotten hit by a car. If something collided from the world with him, and rattled him off like rain on a tin roof in a summer downpour. But this. Inside him the thing came. Like a stupid skin pulling by the inch horror film monster. It!--Terror from Beyond Space. But the terror was in the space inside Dwight. The universe blocked out. Blacked out. It makes you scared of stumbling. Breathing. Heart beating. Sleeping. Awakening. It makes the world inside and out so damned real. And you can't escape it. No one can. No purpose or point or rhyme or reason. Who's in charge of this chicken outfit anyway? "Remember me, guys, " Dwight said in a voice softer than it had ever been before. Even he didn't know if he could hear it or just feel the shadow of the words. "Remember me. It would help. Please." Then there was silence and the cicadas had gotten louder and louder in their courses. The ants were in their little red hills of dirt. The night was blind. And the meadow was only a meadow, whose own end of summer was coming soon. And two boys ran home in opposite directions. In a town where so many children were running home in opposite directions. Each getting to the right ones, hopefully. And hitting their front porches almost in syncopation Their wood front porches with the lights on the posts or beside the front door or shining out the opened windows. Lighting their children's way. Children with hearts that beat a little faster, and not from exertion alone, when they opened the screen doors and raced inside. Something almost got them. Almost. Barely. Safe again inside, though. Parents feeling relief to hear their children's tennis shoes hit the first step or the first section of the porch floor. Relaxing the tension they did not know had been in them, but did now. And the world went into night. This part of the world anyway. And if a boy whispered on the wind somewhere out there in the night, the music of cicadas covered it up, loud and true. And perhaps that was a good thing. Perhaps that was the way it should be. So when parents sat with their children in their kitchens at their evening meal of sandwiches and watermelon halves or perhaps cantaloupe halves, and cold tea or milk or Coke or Dr. Pepper, they could concentrate on their food, their talk, and other things as well. We can't protect you or ourselves or anyone, their parents might say silently. Might think. Hold close. Last night is a million miles away and tomorrow is so near at hand. As they and their children ate at the wooden dinner tables with the oil cloth coverings on those tables. And pretended that the night did not crease and cripple right outside their windows too. The screened windows the bugs hit at over and over again. Trying to get into the light. But always failing. Except for the crafty ones who waited for a door opened, or a window opened and screen raised, so they could fly in then. Those were the ones you had to watch for. To wait for. To be vigilant against. To later drift to their beds. And the boys in those beds, late night, holding their penises. Will we ever have fine consecutive minutes when we're not hard as a rock? Rubbing them. Like a magic lantern. Almost coming. Not quite. Then working up the seas again. Then letting go. Squeezing thanks into them. Legs moving in and out. Breath faster. Stomachs tight. Till the time they could stand it no longer. And in concert all over the town, all over the sleeping world, they shot into their Kleenexes always kept handy. And then they turned on their sides. Again, perhaps in concert. And lay there open eyed till morning. They had to. This would work. This would keep the bad things away. But how do you guard against what is in you? That you can't even see? That you don't even stand a chance of fighting? No battering rams would work then. No matter how brave the Merry Men who swung them. Only staying awake all night, of course, would not work, because no one can be that vigilant all the time. There is always tomorrow night. And the next one too. And that's how the heart beat of the last gasp of summer came to an end this year for these two boys who were once three and who soon would be only one. Only please not for too long. And oh god did Tommy and Johnny want to live. Life was sweet, even though their bones built them more and more out of childhood on those bridges of calcium in bodies most fearfully made. And even more fearfully worn. That's where they get you. When you first have that particular thought. And there is no way to un-think it. No way to go back, then, at all. the end