Читать книгу A Question of Manhood - Robin Reardon - Страница 8

Chapter 1

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Chris will be home tomorrow!

It was like a silent litany all through the house that November Tuesday, last fall. Mom was making herself a little crazy getting the house ready. It wasn’t like the place needed any extra attention, either. I mean, it’s what she does. Keep house. And she does it great. I think she just didn’t know what else to do with herself. I felt the same way, and I almost wished she’d make me do some of it. I knew better than to volunteer, though; I wouldn’t wanna get stuck forever with any household chores that didn’t already have my name on them.

What I really wanted was something I could do to make myself more presentable, to make me feel a little less like the kid brother who wasn’t old enough to do anything useful. Even though I was sixteen, I had a feeling there would seem to be more than the three years between us when I finally laid eyes on Chris.

I had this scene in my head of what it would be like when he walked through the front door. Chris would drop his duffle and brace himself for the onslaught of Mom’s hug. She’d put her whole body into it—nearly squeeze him to death. Finally she’d let go, dabbing with a tissue at her eyes, and Dad would step forward. First he’d just look, taking in the short golden hair, the two days of beard growth, the broad shoulders, the lean body proudly held. And then he’d grin. He’d take Chris’s right hand in his and clap him on the shoulder with the other.

“Son, just look at you! You’ve become quite the man. I’m so proud of you.” That’s how he’d open.

Chris would say something like, “Yeah, well, you were right, Dad. There’s not much that’ll make a man out of you faster than the army.”

“Did I say that?”

“You did.”

“Guess I was right, then. You want a beer?”

I ran through that scene in my head so many times, in the days before he arrived. The words changed a little from one take to the next, or maybe Chris had shaved, and in one take Dad actually told Chris he could start calling Dad by his first name, Andy. One thing that didn’t change? It always played out with me off to the side, worried that I was gonna look like some needy little kid if I wanted to be noticed. If I wanted a hug or even a handshake, too.

Maybe the litany itself was silent, but Dad didn’t stop talking about Chris coming home from Vietnam. He’d been on the phone with all his cronies.

“That’s right! My boy is coming home for some leave. He deserves it, too!” Almost made it sound like he had just one boy. And it wasn’t me.

But I understood how important it was. Chris had been over there for months now, and almost every day it had occurred to me that he might not come home. Ever. That he might step on a land mine, or a punji stick hidden in a hole in the jungle floor, or even get stabbed by some double agent pretending to be a whore while Chris thinks he’s just having some boom boom time with her. His letters didn’t talk about this stuff, because he knew Mom would just about memorize them. But the war had been going on for years by that time, November of 1972, and I’d heard a few things from brothers of friends, and from the newspapers. So just the fact that Chris was still alive was something to celebrate. And when Mom told me after school one day that he was coming home on leave—well, let’s just say I had to go someplace alone. I got on my bicycle and rode and rode until I was exhausted. Then I slowed down but kept going until I was far enough into the remnants of what used to be farmland to be sure no one could hear me when I stood in the middle of a field, nearly invisible in the dusk, and hooted and hollered and howled. It was freezing cold—early November in our little corner of southwestern Pennsylvania—but I didn’t care.

I started imagining what he’d be like as soon as I was back on my bike heading home. Would he have gotten taller? More muscles? Grown a beard? Would he have changed? I know some guys have come back from ’Nam a wreck. Shell-shocked, having nightmares, drinking like fish to forget the shit that happened to them over there. I didn’t want to think what Chris would go through if he’d been in the position of having to kill civilians, especially women or kids. I couldn’t even picture him killing enemy soldiers.

When I got back from my solo journey I was surprised by the reaction from my folks. I hadn’t really expected anyone would notice that I’d left, but they had, and they weren’t happy.

Mom met me at the door, her round face all squeezed into worry lines under her sort-of-blond hair. “Oh, Paul! Where have you been? We were worried sick.”

Dad didn’t even let me reply. “Fine thing you’ve done, getting everyone upset when we’ve finally had some good news!”

“I was just out riding my bike. Jeez!” But by the time they gave me enough space to say this into, they’d both turned away again, Mom to finish getting dinner ready and Dad back to his paper to wait for the meal.

At the table we talked about Chris, of course. Mom kept reciting phrases from his letters, and Dad was obviously trying not to sound like he was looking forward to war stories. At one point I asked, “Dad, didn’t they have any wars for you to fight in?”

He got this stony kind of look on his face, picked up his pipe—beside him on the table, but not lit at the moment—and set it down again. “They did, Paul. Korea. I tried to sign up, but they didn’t like my leg.”

Right. It’s funny, you know? You tend to forget, when you see someone all the time and they limp all the time, that there’s anything unusual in that. Dad was born with one leg about two inches shorter than the other, and he couldn’t run very well. Threw his hip bones off, too, so he couldn’t do long marches. Plus, he makes you forget; he’s a real man about it and never complains. The only complaint I ever heard was that he wasn’t able to be a cop, which he’d really wanted to do. Instead he owns a pet supply store.

Dad’s big into dogs. I’ve always thought that if Mom weren’t allergic to animals, Dad would’ve had a pet store, not just a pet supply store. He does sell birds, mice, rats, fish, and some amphibians, but it’s dogs he really likes. But at least he gets to see the dogs people bring into the store, and he allows it as long as they’re on a leash. And Dad loves it. He likes to talk to the dogs, play with their ears, and he says the owners really warm up when he asks them about their dogs. The next time he sees the people, he always remembers their dog’s name. He thinks it makes customers buy more stuff, or at least keeps them coming back to his store. He’s probably right.

The fact that he’s not a cop is actually just fine by my mom, who much prefers to think of him at the store rather than chasing down criminals. He’s been successful, too—had to move the store twice in the last twelve years into bigger spaces as the Pittsburgh sprawl grew. There’s talk lately of a big chain buying him out, but he’s only forty and says he isn’t ready to retire. Besides, he always wanted Chris and me, or at least one of us, to take over the business. The danger of hanging on, though, is that the chain could open a competing store and undersell him until he closes. Then he’d lose everything.

I can’t say I really want to take over the business. I had always expected Chris would do it; he’d always been the reliable one.

After dinner, in my room trying to focus on homework, all I could think of was Chris coming home. I stared out the window over my desk half the time, my eyes following the cars that went by the front of the house. Every time I started worrying that he’d be totally changed, some memory from when we were younger would push it out. Growing up? I wasn’t just the pest kid brother. Well, at least not all the time. It was like he wanted me to know where he’d stepped wrong so I could make better decisions. Sometimes he even made them for me.

Imagine this scene. My best friend when I was eleven, Charlie, had borrowed my baseball glove. His folks couldn’t afford to buy him one. Or so they said. Looking back, I think they had the money, but his dad spent it on booze. Anyway, he lost it. Or, he didn’t lose it, actually; his neighbor’s dog chewed the hell out of it, but he told me he lost it.

Furious, I marched right over to his house and searched all over the yard, in the basement, in Charlie’s room, every place that might conceivably hide a glove. I didn’t know whether to believe him that it was misplaced somewhere or whether he might be hiding it to keep it. I mean, you don’t just lose a baseball glove; it’s too big. And too smelly. But I couldn’t find it.

Just before I stamped off home again I said, “You better find it, or else!”

I was steaming mad when I got home and was all ready to go to my folks about it. Chris saw me first, though. He was reading some book, lying on the couch.

He looked up as I slammed the door behind me. “Hey, Paul, what’s that for?”

“Nothing!”

“You’re madder than a wet cat. Get over here.” He swung his legs off the couch and sat up.

“It’s Charlie. He stole my glove!”

“The fielder’s glove you got for your birthday?”

“What other glove do I have?”

“Are you sure he stole it? What did he say?”

“He borrowed it two weeks ago, and I’ve been asking for it back. I called him a little while ago, and he says he lost it.”

“Maybe he did. Did he—”

“Chris, you don’t just lose a glove.”

“Did he offer to replace it?”

“Ha. He couldn’t afford one for himself. How’s he gonna do that?”

“Well, let’s just think about this a minute. Charlie’s your best friend, right? And if you didn’t have good reason to trust him in the first place, would you have let him borrow it?”

I was trying to stay mad, but my steam was petering out. “Well…no.”

“So why don’t you trust him now? And why should he lie to you? His thinking is probably more like, if you let him use it once, you’d let him use it again. And wouldn’t that be better than losing you as a friend? Why take that chance? Besides, if he’s lying and he still has it, he’d never be able to use it anyplace you could see it.”

I wasn’t ready to give in. “How do I know what he’s thinking? People change, y’know. Maybe he figured it was the only way he’d ever have one of his own. Take someone else’s.”

“But it doesn’t make a lot of sense, and it isn’t something that sounds like Charlie. Think of it another way: What if he weren’t your friend anymore?”

I blinked. Charlie? Not my friend? “Well…he won’t be, if he doesn’t replace that glove.”

“So that glove was worth more than being friends?”

This stumped me, but only for a few seconds. “All I know is I want that glove back.” I was afraid Chris was going to talk me out of my righteous anger, and I didn’t want to be talked out of it. I wanted to hang on tight and yell and curse. I stomped up to my room, turned on the radio, threw myself onto the bed, and sulked.

Later I found out that Chris went to Charlie’s and talked to him. Charlie showed him the tattered remnants that he’d managed to get away from Zodiac, the half shepherd, half Lab that lived next to him. What ended up happening was that Chris lent Charlie enough money to buy me another glove.

I didn’t know this right away, of course. All I knew was that I wasn’t going to call Charlie, or talk to him, until he did the right thing. But when he knocked on my door a few days later and handed me a brand new fielder’s glove—well, I didn’t feel that rush of vindication that all my fury had led me to expect. I didn’t want to say, “That’s more like it.” Or “Glad to see you came to your senses.”

I stared at Charlie, wondering where the hell he’d got the money. All I said was, “Thanks.”

We stood there, staring at our sneakers, until he said, “Well, I should go.”

“D’you have to?”

So we went upstairs and played records until dinnertime.

Two years later, just before Charlie and his mom had to move away after the divorce, to go stay with his grandparents for a while, he finally told me what had happened. He was all worried because he hadn’t been able to pay Chris back completely, and he didn’t know how he was gonna do it now.

“Tell you what,” I said. “Whatever’s left, I’ll pay him.”

“But that’s not fair.”

“’Course it is. He may have paid for the glove, but you and I both benefited, right? I mean, we stayed friends. Shake?”

“Shake.” And we hugged. We’d never done that before, and now we’d never have another chance. I never saw Charlie again, but I feel like I still have his friendship. Chris saw to that.

A few days after Charlie told me all this, I confronted Chris. “How come you bought that glove for Charlie to give to me?”

He chuckled. “Took you all this time to figure that out?”

“Never mind that. He says he still owes you.”

“He doesn’t owe me. You do.”

“Duh. I already told him that. But why’d you do it?”

“You were about to lose a friend. I’d been in that place once. Lost a friend over something really stupid. I vowed it would never happen again. And I didn’t want to see it happen to you.”

“How did it happen with you?”

He took a deep breath and closed his eyes a second. “This is really embarrassing. But maybe it will be good for you to hear. It was winter, and there’d been this huge snowstorm. The plows had pushed lots of snow to the edges of the playground. I was about the same age as you, when you lost that glove.

“At recess, we were playing King of the Mountain. Only we had teams. I was on the same team as Dean Pendleton. You probably don’t remember him. Redheaded kid. Anyway, I was always really good at this game, climbing up the snow mountains and pushing kids on the other team back down. But this one day they had more kids than our team, and we were really struggling. I managed to claim the top, and I decided I was gonna stay there no matter what. So I was pushing at kids right, left, anybody I saw.

“Now, as you know if you’ve ever played this, you’re supposed to help your own teammates get to the top, too. But I was just thinking, Me: I want to be on the top. At one point, Dean was clambering up—I was looking right at his bright blue wool hat—and he’d nearly made it when someone on the other team got hold of his leg from farther down. Dean looked up and called to me.”

Chris took another breath and let it out real slow. “He was reaching out a hand, yelling at me to help him. All I could think of was that if I tried to help him, and if I couldn’t pull him away from the other kid, we could both go down. It was him or me, not us. I can still see the strain on his face. A kind of panic in his eyes.”

He shook his head like he was throwing water off his hair and then stared down at his hands. “I ignored him. I looked right into his eyes like I didn’t know who he was, and I ignored him. And he was pulled farther and farther down the hill.”

He stopped. I said, “Did you hold the top?”

Chris looked at me. “Have you been paying attention? Yeah, I held the top. But I lost my friend.”

So this was my brother. And for several months now, he’d been an army infantryman, a grunt, fighting the VC. He’d signed up, in fact. Put off college to go. It upset my mom a lot; she wanted him to go to college, the first one in the family who would go. And he’s smart; he would’ve gotten into a good school. But mostly what she didn’t want was for him to get hurt. Or worse. Dad was a different story. He sounded so proud, telling his friends that his son had volunteered.

I guess I felt sort of someplace in between. I understood my dad’s pride; I felt it, too. On the other hand, lots of guys who go to ’Nam don’t come home.

After Chris signed up, Mom started going to church alone. She had always gone, or almost every week anyway, to the Lutheran church she’d been going to since she was a little girl. It was the church she and Dad got married in, and we went as a family until I was maybe, I dunno, twelve? Anyway, at some point I started putting up a fuss, and Dad said he’d stay home with me. A few times after that Mom insisted I go with her, but eventually she gave up trying to force me. To tell you the truth, I think Dad was just as happy to stay home, read the paper, lounge around, whatever. He worked pretty much six-plus days a week, and Sunday was the only day he could sleep in and just vegetate before he started doing paperwork for the store.

Chris kept going, though. That’s so like him, you know? I don’t even know how seriously he took it, but even if it meant nothing to him he’d go because of Mom. Chris never talked about it, although Mom would sometimes talk during Sunday dinner about something the preacher had said in his sermon. I just remember feeling glad I hadn’t had to get up early and then sit through it, on those hard wooden benches, in uncomfortable clothes, hot in summer and drafty in winter, pretending to feel all solemn and contrite and holy. What a crock, was what I thought.

But several weeks after Chris signed up, one Saturday dinnertime Dad said, “Irene, you going to church tomorrow?”

“Of course I am. I always go. You know that.”

Well, she almost always went, anyway; there was no point in arguing, so I kept quiet. Then Dad said, “Think I’ll go with you.” And after that he went with her a lot. I was old enough by then to stay home on my own, so that’s what I did. I figured if God was going to listen to anyone about keeping Chris safe, it wasn’t gonna be me.

That homecoming scene happened pretty much as I’d pictured. Chris looked tall and masculine and strong, but his hair was longer than I’d imagined; guess they don’t make them keep it buzz cut. But there was one real important difference. After Dad offered the beer, Chris looked at me before he answered. “How’s my kid brother? Too old for a hug?”

He held an arm toward me. This foolish grin slid onto my face from somewhere—I couldn’t stop it—and I shrugged and moved toward him. His arms felt so strong around me, like there was nothing he couldn’t do. He made me believe he was glad to see me.

All of us wanted to know what it was like, all the stuff there’s no room for in letters, all the stuff we wanted to hear him say with his own voice. That first night, though, he was just too tired, barely able to sit at the dinner table, but he was so happy to be eating home cooking. Every so often he’d just sit there, face blank, eyes closed, chewing slowly. You could tell he was committing every texture, every hint of flavor to memory.

At one point he set his fork down and said, “You know, I never expected the food over there to be good. I just didn’t know how—different it would be. From good food. From this.” He looked like he wanted to say more, but in the end he just shook his head slowly and put another forkful into his mouth.

We’d been sending him care packages. The first one had lots of different stuff in it, like socks and underwear and little goodies. The letter he wrote back was clear: All that stuff was great, but what he really wanted was FOOD. So the next packages all had peanut butter (“choke” is what the guys called it over there), crackers, cookies, candy, Tang, more cookies, more candy, and he loved it. We couldn’t send anything that would go bad, like cold cuts or cheese, that sort of thing, but his favorite seemed to be cookies. All kinds. Plus, he said in one letter, they were great for trading with the other guys for things.

“What kinds of things?” Mom’s return letter asked. Probably she wanted to be able to include everything he might want to keep and everything he might want to trade for. But his response was evasive. “Oh, just whatever. You never know what you’re going to be in the mood for.”

While he was home, in private, he swore me to secrecy and told me that what he traded cookies for—though he did eat a lot of them—was beer, cigarettes, and koon sa. Marijuana. But he sure wasn’t going to tell our folks about those items. I’d always thought of Chris as kind of a Goody Two-shoes, in a lot of ways. He always seemed to do everything right, as far as our folks were concerned, and I always felt like the troublemaker. So, to use one of my mom’s favorite phrases, imagine my consternation when Chris told me he smoked pot! It was the first sign, I think now, of the new way I would come to see him—a lot of stain on the pure white—by the time he left to go back overseas.

That first night, though, at the dinner table, Chris nearly nodded off before he could finish his piece of the chocolate cake Mom had made, but he asked for more coffee and that seemed to perk him up a bit. Then he left the room for a minute and came back with stuff for us.

He gave Mom a huge piece of blue and green silk material that she could use to make whatever she wanted. It made her cry, and she worried that she’d get salt stains on the silk. Dad got a really cool pipe. It was made of some special kind of wood they had over there. He wanted to use it immediately and even got up, mumbling about trying it first with the most bland tobacco he had so he could get a sense of the pipe, but Mom made him give it to her so she could wash it first.

When it was my turn, Chris said, “Hold out your hands. Make a cup.” And onto my palms he dropped five round metal pellets. “Ever heard of a cluster bomb?” I shook my head. “Those five are from a SADEYE. It’s about as big as a baseball. Lots of them get dropped at once, and when they hit the ground they explode. Then all these steel balls go shooting out.”

Out of the corner of my eye I saw Mom shudder. But I said, “Neat!” Then Chris handed me something wrapped in brown paper. Dad asked to hold the pellets, and he kind of played with them while I unwrapped the package. I held up a pair of shoes. Sandals, really. They were super ugly. I looked at Chris, confused.

“Those, little brother, are called Ho Chi Minhs. They’re made out of cut-up tires. The straps are from inner tubes. We wear them around camp when it’s hot, or when it’s muddy or wet. You can’t hurt ’em.” He grinned like they were a real treat.

“Thanks!” I said, trying to sound enthusiastic. I was thinking I’d just have to give them a try; Chris didn’t steer me wrong as a rule.

Mom wasn’t so patient. “Good Lord, Christopher! What do you want to go perpetuating that man for? He’s dead, and that’s where he ought to be. Why name a shoe after him?”

Chris just shrugged. “Well, we walk on ’em, don’t we? We wear them when we need to walk through stuff we don’t want to touch, right?”

This shut her up, though she did cross her arms and make some noise of disgust. I looked at them again, with a little more respect this time.

Coffee or no coffee, Chris had to crawl upstairs to sleep right after dinner. I took my steel balls and my tire-tread sandals into my room, and at first I was thinking I’d stay up there. It was nice to think of Chris in the next room, and I pictured him in his bed for the first time in what seemed like forever. His bed and mine had just the wall between them, and I pictured him lying in there, head near the wall, feet pointing toward the window that looked out onto the backyard. But pretty soon I heard him snoring through the wall, and I wondered if Mom and Dad were talking about the war and about Chris, and I wanted to be a part of that.

They were at the kitchen table, finishing their coffee. When they knew I was there, Dad stopped talking and they both looked at me. I grabbed a soda, flipped the top, and made myself comfortable, waiting for him to go on. Finally he shrugged and finished what he was saying when I came in.

“Anyway, forget that idea, Irene. There’s no way he isn’t going back to finish his tour. They expect him back, and back he’ll go.”

“But why?” Mom’s voice sounded almost whiny, and her plump face went into this little girl pout. “The war is ending! Henry Kissinger said so. Why can’t our son stay home, now that he’s here?”

The war was ending. At least, that’s what we’d been hearing. Just recently the news was all about how the Linebacker operation was over. Chris wasn’t directly involved in that, since it was air force and navy carrying it out, but it was this huge offensive, and it sure put a dent in the Vietcong’s battle capabilities. And it probably cinched the election for Nixon the week before, though people like my dad believe he would have beat McGovern, anyway. Dad’s a real Nixon supporter. But my friend Terry Cavanaugh’s dad had some other opinions, and I’d heard some of them.

I chimed in, “Mr. Cavanaugh says that was just an election ploy, saying the war was ending.”

Dad turned a hard stare on me. “President Nixon was in no need of falsehoods to win this election. It was no contest. Kissinger wouldn’t need to lie just to win the election for the president.”

I shrugged like it didn’t matter to me. And, really, as long as the war ended and Chris was okay, I didn’t give a shit who won the election. Or how.

Mom wasn’t done. “But it’s nearly Thanksgiving!” she almost wailed. “He should at least be allowed to stay with us for that!”

“Irene, stop it. The boy volunteered, very bravely”—here he turned back to me, as if to underscore silently what he thought of Terry’s brother, Ron, who’d gone to Canada to escape the draft—“and he will finish his work. He will not let his squad down. No son of mine backs out of his commitments.”

Mom got up in sort of a huff and started collecting dishes to wash. We have this portable—though that hardly seems like the right word—dishwasher that you can roll over to the sink and attach to the faucet while you run it. Mom nearly dented the counter in front of the sink, she hauled it over so fast and hard. She made as much noise with the dishes as she could without breaking them, but flatware is less fragile, and she had her way with it.

Dad tried once more to get her to see reason, as he would have put it. “Imagine, would you? Just for a second? What would he feel like, sitting here with us having turkey and gravy and potatoes and pumpkin pie, knowing his platoon was over there having rations? Imagine how he must feel every day he’s here, when one of the guys who may have saved his life at some point, maybe last week even, is in danger now.”

She didn’t even look at him. A fork hit the floor, I think by accident, and then another landed next to it and bounced and clattered with the force of her throw.

Dad got up and stomped unevenly out of the kitchen, leaving me there sucking on my soda can and feeling like some piece of luggage no one had enough hands to carry. Fine. So I headed back to my room.

I got as far as the foot of the stairs when Dad came up behind me. “And as for you,” he said in this angry tone, pointing a finger at me, “don’t you go listening to anything that dove Cavanaugh says. He should be ashamed of that boy of his, instead of making excuses.” He turned on his heel and headed for his recliner in the living room.

“What’d I do?” I called after him. Goddamn it, why does he always assume I’ve done something wrong? It’s like all the shit Chris hasn’t done, all the stuff a kid usually gets blamed for, is what I get accused of double. I’m no angel; wouldn’t want to be. But if they think they have trouble with me, they should think again.

I sat staring out the window in front of my desk, ignoring my homework, telling myself sourly that I’d even have Saturday night for schoolwork, though that was something else I was angry about, actually. My allowance was puny compared to most of my friends, so paying for dates was an extra challenge on top of just getting them. I’d asked for more money in September, but of course the answer was no. That had felt like a slap in the face, with the store doing as well as it was.

So parties were one place I could take a date that didn’t cost anything. Saturday there was gonna be this really great party at my friend Kevin’s house, and I had already asked Laura Holmes, just about the cutest girl in class. I’ve always thought I was okay looking—dark blond hair with just a little wave to it, gray-green eyes, decent build—but even so I would have thought Laura would be out of my league. It took guts, or arrogance, just to ask her. And she’d said yes! But when it came out that it was the weekend Chris would be home, my mom was all over me.

“Young man, you can’t possibly think anything in this world is more important than spending time with your brother! He’s been over there risking his life every day, and anything could happen to him at any time. He’ll be here only a few days, and you think you’re going out with your friends?” She stood there, dust rag dangling from the hand that wasn’t planted on her broad hip, glaring at me.

“Ma, it’s not just ‘going out with my friends.’ It’s taking this really”—I’d almost said hot—“sweet girl, someone every guy wants to go out with, to, like, the biggest party of the fall!”

She wagged her finger at me, the rag flopping around in the air. “Do you want me to pull your father’s weight into this? You’re not going, Paul. I don’t care how important it seems to you now. In the overall scheme of things, in retrospect, it will pale in comparison with how important spending time with your brother will be.”

We stood there, kind of facing off, a test of wills. Sometimes this works for me. She doesn’t always have what it takes to stare me down; she’s a softy, really. But not this time. She was ice. And the look on her face told me she would pull Dad into it if necessary. And there was no way I could win with him, once he set his mind on something. I’d need Chris for that. Chris was always the only one of all of us who could move my dad with reason or anything else, he’s that stubborn.

Go ahead, tell Dad. Let him do his worst. I’m going to that party! It was on the tip of my tongue. But my jaw clenched tight shut, almost against my will, my hands balled into fists at my sides, and I turned and stormed off. The worst of it was that I had to call Laura and tell her. When I did, I couldn’t really get a bead on her reaction. I mean, she didn’t pout or whine or anything, but it didn’t feel like sunshine and roses. What a freakin’ mess. Who could blame her if she never agreed to go out with me again?

And now, even though Chris was actually home, just thinking about missing that party this weekend made me steam. Lying there on the bed listening to Chris snore in the next room, this feeling of resentment started to bubble up. When you thought about it, I sort of had a lot to resent Chris for. He was the favorite son, no doubt there. And if he’d been some kind of monster, or at least if he’d been mean to me, I could have gotten angry with him and felt good about it.

But he never gave me a chance like that. He’d never done anything to get me into trouble, and in fact, he’d stood up for me so many times in one way or another, getting my folks to ease off on some punishment Dad was sure I deserved for whatever, getting both of them to see that something I’d done was just horseplay and not a sign of evil taking over my life and theirs. He’d always been able to calm Dad down—he was the only one who could—and he’d always done his best for me.

But I wasn’t in the mood to think of what a great brother he was. Even so, as I lay there on my bed, music playing quietly, staring at the treads on one of my Ho Chi Minhs, I could feel the steam leak out of my attempt to stay angry with Chris about missing the party. And a chance with Laura. I tried to shift the focus, be angry with Mom, but I couldn’t keep that up. I knew why she’d thrown the fork. I understood. As long as Chris was here, he was safe. Staying for Thanksgiving would be great, but really it was the staying that mattered. The being home, away from the danger, away from the possibility that one of those casualty reports could include him. Away—far away—from the knock on the door when some stateside colonel, hat in hand, might come to tell us the last thing we wanted to hear.

But I knew what Dad was saying, too. Maybe Mom couldn’t—or wouldn’t—imagine the tug Chris must feel from over there all the while he was home, but I could. And I knew that if I were Chris, I couldn’t really enjoy that terrific meal. And even if I did, I’d feel guilty.

Christ, this whole fucking mess had everyone fighting. Just the previous week in school, Terry Cavanaugh and this other kid, Bobby Darnell, got into it but good. I didn’t catch the whole thing, but it sounded like Bobby was talking up his brother Ken’s escapades, how many VC he’d killed, that sort of thing. I heard Terry shout something about certain people having messiah complexes, thinking they could go over there and save the world, which of course set Bobby off, and we had to pull them apart.

“Easy, man, easy,” I mumbled into Terry’s ear as Kevin Dodge helped me hold on to him and back away. Two other guys were taking charge of Bobby. We barely got things quiet before a teacher or somebody saw, so no one got in trouble, but it just goes to show you. War is war, and it spreads.

That little episode got me thinking about loyalty. I mean, Terry was trying real hard to be loyal to his brother Ron, but Ron—hell, he fucking skipped the country! So guys like Chris and Ken, they went over, and damn it, Chris was no martyr. He didn’t think he was Jesus Christ. And I don’t think Ken thought he was, either. But to be honest, I was a little angry at Ron, and maybe even at Terry for sticking up for him. But I was also mad at Chris for going.

And before too long, I’d be mad at Dad for making him go. This was something I didn’t allow myself to think about. Not even that night, meditating on the tire-tread sandals. But now? Now I do.

A Question of Manhood

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