On Entering North Adamsville High Redux
, Circa 1960
From The Pen Of Joshua Lawrence
Breslin
A few years ago, maybe four or five
now, around the time that Frank Jackman (always Frank and not Francis since
that was too much like that St Francis who was good to animals and stuff and no
self-respecting corner boy wanted that tagged to his name besides the formal name
sounded kind of faggy when the guys talked about names one night, also not
Frankie since that name was taken up in his crowd) and Frankie Riley (always
Frankie and not Francis for the same reason as Frank but also Frankie because
he had always been called Frankie since time immemorial to distinguish him from
his father Frank, Sr.) his Jack Slack’s bowling alleys corner boy chieftain all
through high school in North Adamsville had been commemorating, maybe better to
say comparing notes, on their fiftieth anniversary of entry into that school in
the ninth grade Frank had written a remembrance of the first day of school freshman
year. He had written it at the behest of a female fellow classmate, Dora, for a
class website where she was the webmaster that she and a few others had established
so that those from the Class of 1964 who wished to, those who were able to,
could communicate with each other in the new dispensation of cyberspace.
That remembrance, one of a series of sketches
that he eventually did, and on recent inquiry from Jimmy Jenkins another
classmate and ex-corner boy comrade, Frank has stated that he stood by that “sketch”
characterization, centered on the anxieties that he had on that first day about
making a brand new impression on the freshman class, about changing his junior
high school quasi-“beatnik” style, his two thousand fact barrage that he would
lay on anybody who would listen. A style change that lots of guys and gals have
gone through when faces with a new situation, although the people he was trying
to impress had already been his classmates in that junior high school and were
painfully aware of the previous way that he had presented himself, presented himself
under Frankie’s direction, to the world.
When Frankie at the time read what Frank had written, a thing filled with new
found sobbing, weeping, and pious innocence he sent him an e-mail which brought
Frank up short. Frankie threatened in no uncertain terms to write his own
“sketch” refuting all the sobbing, weeping, piously innocent noise that Frank
had been trying to bamboozle their fellow classmates with. The key point that
Frankie threatened to bring down on a candid world, the candid world in this
instance being the very curious Dora for one, and her coterie of friends who had
stayed in contact since high school since they all lived in the area, to be
clear about was the case of Frank Jackman and one Lydia Stevenson. Or rather the
case, the love-bug case he had for her. That, and not some mumble-jumble about
changing his act which he never really did since you could always depend on
Frank going on and on with one of his two thousand arcane facts that he tried
to impress every girl he ran across in high school with and to dress like he had
just come walking in from post-beat Harvard Square, was the very real point of
what was aggravating him on that long ago hot endless first Wednesday after
Labor Day morning.
See Frank had gotten absolutely nowhere
with Lydia, nowhere beyond the endless talking stage, and thus nowhere, in
junior high but he was still carrying the torch come freshman year and fifty
years later he still felt that fresh-scented breathe and that subtle perfume,
or bath soap, or whatever it was she wore, breezing over him. Or maybe her curse,
a North Adamsville curse that he claimed at one point that Lydia cast on him
since he never had then a girlfriend from school, or from North Adamsville for
that matter. Not in high school anyway. The currency of that fresh breeze that occupied
his mind may have been pushed forward by his getting back in touch with
classmates. And as fate would have it, the thrice-married Frank, never one to
say never to love had as a result of getting back in touch with classmates on
the website had a short fruitless affair with another classmate, Laura, who had
been a close friend of Lydia’s in junior high school and told him a couple of
things about what Lydia had thought about Frank. Laura confirmed that Lydia had
expected Frank to ask her out in junior high school but also confirmed by that
failed affair that Lydia’s curse was still at work fifty years later. And it is
that missed opportunity to fall under the sway of that Lydia scent that will
drive this short sketch, hell, forget Frank and his sketch business, this short
piece.
This is the way Frank described to me what
happened after Frankie sent that fatal e-mail that might expose his long hidden
thoughts:
“Frankie, for once listened patiently
as I finished my story, the one that he say was filled to the brim with
sobbing, weeping, whining bull about starting anew and being anxious about what
would happen, and which he threatened to go viral on, immediately after I was
finished let out with a “Who are you kidding Jackman that is not the way you
told me the story back then.” Then he went on. “I remember very well what you
were nervous about. What that cold night sweats, that all-night toss and turn
teen angst, boy version, had been about and it wasn’t first day of school
jitters. It was nothing but thinking about her. That certain "she"
that you had kind of sneaked around mentioning as you had been talking, talking
your his head off about filling out forms, getting books, and other weird noises,
just to keep the jitters down. The way you told it then, and I think you called
me up right after school was out to discuss the matter, was that while on those
pre-school steps you had just seen her, seen her with the other North Adamsville
junior high girls on the other side of the steps, and got all panicky, got kind
of red-faced about it, and so you are going to have to say a little something
about that. And if you don’t I will.”
Frankie continued along this line,
stuff which seemed to be true but which made me wonder how a guy who when we
met at the Sunnyville Grille over in Boston for a few drinks to discuss this
and that, not the Lydia thing but our corner boy exploits, couldn’t remember where
he left his car keys and we had to call AAA to come out and find them on his
driver’s side seat. Jesus. Here’s what
he was getting at.
“See, I know the previous school year,
late in the eighth grade at North Adamsville Junior High, toward the end of the
school year you had started talking to that Lydia Stevenson in art class. Yes,
that Lydia who on her mother’s side from was from some branch of the Adams
family who had run the jagged old ship-building town there in North Adamsville for
eons and who had employed my father and a million other fathers, and I think
yours’ too if I am not mistaken, for a while anyway, around there and then just
headed south, or to Greece or someplace like that, for the cheaper labor I
heard later. She was one of the granddaughters or some such relation I never
did get it all down. And that part was not all that important anyway because
what mattered, what mattered to you, was that faint scent, that just barely
perceivable scent, some nectar scent, that came from Lydia when you sat next to
her in art class and you two talked, talked your heads off.
“But you never did anything about it,
not then anyway although you said when we talked later about it you had this
feeling, maybe just a feeling because you wanted things to be that way but a
feeling anyway, that she had expected you to ask her out. Asking out for junior
high school students then, and for freshmen in high school too because we
didn’t have licenses to drive cars, being the obligatory "first date"
at Jimmy Jack's Shack (no, not the one off Adamsville Boulevard, that's for the
tourists and old people, the one on Hancock up toward the Square is the one I
am talking about). You said you were just too shy and uncertain to do it.
“Why? Well you said it was because you
came from the “wrong side of the tracks” in the old town, over by the old
abandoned Old Colony tracks and she, well like I said came from a branch of the
Adams family that lived over on Elm in one of those Victorian houses that the
swells are crazy for now, and I guess were back then too. That is when you
figured that if you studied up on a bunch of stuff, stuff that you liked to
study anyway, then come freshman year you just might be able to get up the
nerve to ask her to go over to Jimmy Jack's for something to eat and to listen
to the jukebox after school some day like every other Tom, Dick and Harry did
then.
“.... So don’t tell me suddenly, a bell
rang, a real bell, students, like lemmings to the sea, were on the move,
especially those junior high kids that you had nodded to before as you took
those steps, two at a time. And don’t tell me it was too late then to worry
about style, or anything else. Or make your place in the sun as you went along,
on the fly. No, it was about who kind of brushed against you as you rushed up
the stairs and who gave you one of her biggest faintly-scented smiles as you
both raced up those funky granite steps. Yeah, a place in the sun, sure.”
And so there you had Frank satisfying Frankie
enough with his agreement to make public on the class website the gist of his stubborn
e-mail. Funny though as much time as they spent talking about it back in the day
and then when they resurrected it a few years ago Frank never did get to first
base Lydia in high school, although she sent him a few more of those big
faintly-scented smiles which Frank didn’t figure out until too late. Within a
couple of weeks of the school opening Lydia was seen hand in hand with Paul
Jones, a sophomore then, the guy who would lead North Adamsville to two consecutive
division football championships and who stayed hand in hand with him until she graduated.
Frank had had a few girlfriends in high school, Harvard Square refugees like himself
who went crazy for his two thousand facts but they were not from the town. The
few times Frank did try to get dates in school or in town, get to first base,
he was shot down for all kinds of reasons, a couple of times because he did not
have a car and the girls had not the slightest interest in walking around on a
date, a couple of times he was just flat stood up when the girls he was to date
took the next best thing instead. Yeah, the Lydia hex sure did him in. And after
that Laura disaster don’t say he wasn’t jinxed, just don’t say it around him.
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