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Steven McDonald. I loved him. He was tall
and muscular, with curly blonde hair. When he smiled, he blushed,
and his cheeks turned pink.
He was on the basketball team, the baseball
team and the football team.
Somehow I knew that his father worked as
a prison guard. I'd heard rumors that he had a brother in prison
for murder-something to do with drugs.
Steven McDonald. I imagined kissing his
fingertips, putting his hand to the side of my face, feeling the
warmth of his palm on my cheek. I wanted to kiss the pain from
his face, the suffering of having a brother who was a murderer.
I wanted to kiss that mouth that would
break into a lopsided grin after he ran for a touchdown.
I had dreams where he was crying for his
brother, and he was calling my name. He was sobbing and rocking
back and forth and I was on the street, there to cradle his crumpled
body and nurse him back to sanity.
He was a senior. I was a freshman. I called
him on the phone sometimes just to hear his voice. Of course,
I never spoke.
He had a locker next to mine. I imagined
leaving him chocolates, roses, pictures of me, a hand knit sweater,
an album, posters.
I usually didn't see him and when I did,
I was embarrassed. I felt like I knew him or part of him. I felt
like I had a relationship with him. I felt close too him. And
of course when I saw him, I realized that it was all bogus and
I would be totally humiliated if he had even a glimpse into my
fantasy life.
I wanted him to look at me. I wanted him
to notice me. I wanted to walk by his side.
Once I told my friend Dana how much I liked
him. Later in the week we were next to him at the locker and she
unzipped the back of my dress, right in front of him. He gave
me that lopsided grin. I was so embarrassed.
I expected him to say something to me after
that. But he didn't.
But later in the year, one day I was getting
my books out of my locker, bending down. When I straightened up,
he was there. "Groovy pants," he said. I looked down
at my new corduroy bellbottoms. They were nice. But I would never
use the word groovy. It rubbed me the wrong way, like chalk against
a blackboard.
He smiled his lospided grin, the blush
of rose spread on his cheek. And I fell back in love with him.
Later that year, something amazing happened.
I was taking driver's ed and so was he. And when they gave out
the car assignments, I was in the same car as him.
I totally freaked out. I would be sitting
in the same car as him for 45 minutes each week. Maybe I would
even sit next to him.
I worried about my clothes. I decided to
wear perfume, Jean Nate, since we would be so close. And to wear
my blue corduroy bell bottoms. And my blue velvet vest. And my
clogs. And my name necklace.
The next week, when I got into the car,
my heart beat like a cymbal. I was sure everybody in the car could
hear it. Steven was the first to drive. I was relieved because
I was nervous to sit next to him. I was afraid I would start to
sweat.
Steven began to drive. We drove down Broadway,
down Scranton, and then, down Ocean Avenue. I saw a small child
on the side of the road, riding his tricycle, all alone.
Suddenly he toppled over. He lay there,
crying, his mouth bleeding.
"Stop," I shouted to Steven.
"Why?" asked Mr. Barrett, the
driving instructor. He had not seen the kid.
"A kid just got hurt, and he's all
alone."
"Turn around," said Mr. Barrett
to Steven.
"He doesn't need us," said Steven.
"He'll be fine." And he kept driving.
"But he's all alone," I said.
"He's bleeding."
Mr. Barrett finally made Steven turn around.
By that time, the little boy's mother was there, comforting him.
When Steven took his place in the back
seat next to me, I didn't care how he looked. He had lost his
charm for me.
And I realized something. I had never really
loved him.
I had loved the idea of him. I had loved
the idea of love.
I had made him up.
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