Date: Mon, 23 May 2005 18:05:57 -0700 From: B Keeper Subject: "Two Boys, Made Out of Snow" "Two Boys, Made Out of Snow" by Timothy Stillman We were going to the snowfields of California, circa 1850 someday. But now we were in dead of winter (why is winter called dead?, it's the most lively of the seasons, it sparkles the blood, it gets the heart to pumping, it stirs something magical inside us; summer with its heat and torpid ness and sweat, that makes us not want to move, not want to breathe, not want to do anything--now summer is the dead season). Snow falls heavy and deep and fine for falling into snow piles. And they said my friend was a ghost. They said they were troubled about me. But they weren't. They were troubled about their school. And the attendant publicity. And the grants cut off. All of that. If a boy found another boy to be friends with, who wouldn't shy away from a discussion of sadness now and then, what harm could it cause them? The sky was a pallid kind of watery, unstable gray this January afternoon, getting on toward sun set though there was no sun left of winter to set. We were in our heavy clothes and coats, making snowballs and throwing them at each other; making snow angels. Kenny was an angel. He was everything good about a not so good world. He fell feather soft into the feather soft snow drift, his arms spread out like he was taking off toward heaven but forgot the direction. I snow angel-ed right beside him, my arms out. Our hands touched. We were still. The snow rushed hard to our faces. Some sleet mixed in. Pelting us. It was such a good time. "He's not real, Bobby. He's an imaginary companion. See, check the records, go on. He doesn't even go to this school. He's not registered. A dream can't sign his name. A dream can't be anything but someone you made up and it will make you sad the rest of your days if you don't realize this now." We lay there. I looked over at him. There were snowflakes on his dark eyebrows. On his face. His tongue tip darted out like a lizard's to catch the snow that fell on his mouth. His eyes were closed in peaceful surrender. His face was rosy from the intense coldness. His hand was cold in mine, as we held our fingers together and he slipped his hand closer into my palm and I held his small hand to keep him safe. How small and insubstantial we felt then. And he was a good expansive feeling. The school was in Connecticut. A boys' school. For exceptional children. Read that as: troubled children. The staff loved to have problems like me. It was their meal ticket. Their cash cow. They charged a fortune. You could see them almost snapping their choppers when a kid had a problem. They were blessed four hundred times over with children with problems. My problem was a safe one. A mirage. And whoever falls in love with a mirage is asking for trouble, so they said. Kenny was a small boy. He was too thin, almost anorexic. He stumbled sometimes, but I, not much bigger than he, but a bit, would help him up. He stuttered at times. And he wept sometimes. Somewhat like I do, though I have more control over myself. The other boys laughed at us though, equally. It was easier in the sharing for us. We lay not talking. I wanted to lie closer to him. I wanted to hide him in warm clothes and fireplace crackle and safe houses where no one comes looking for you because they don't want to find you and are just as glad when they don't. His lips were pale. His color when he wasn't flushed red from the cold chapping weather was rather a beautiful pearl color that makes you realize why man dives deeply into the ocean to find that prize of rare beauty, and why sometimes man does not come to the surface again, because once that majesty is found, how do you go back to the world of sun and land? And why would you want to? We thought of sadness, since we got in trouble talking about it. This was a relentlessly happy school. The teachers, the counselors (more numerous than the teachers) were all so happy it would make you want to spit. The kids were not happy. They were relentlessly grim and angry and alone and furious with being alive at all. So Kenny and I were a welcome relief, drowning in the snows of our youth, missing being young while we were still only 12 and 13 respectively. We should have worn our mittens. Our hands were bitterly cold on the ice crystals. We wore toboggans. Which hid Kenny's lank somewhat lusterless black hair. Which hid my too mousy brown hair. I lay there looking at him. Taking in the all of him. Shamelessly. I lay on the frozen numbness of the ground, and watched him ease with breathing. Watched the snow like little visible breath shovels coming out of his nose and mouth. Be me, Kenny, I thought, my breath going deeply inside me and then released in my own visibility with great reluctance. Be me and I will be your illusion and will never let you down or laugh at you and put you in your place and then go away, like it was my mission in life.. The machinery of boy is a miracle. The machinery of laughter, yes, even we laughed from time to time, but always in the parameters of what we were, how we saw the landscape in front of us and inside us, but we could be happy, in that rather wonderful melancholy way. We were a team. I wanted this machinery beside me all my days. I wanted the gears and pulleys and levers and the something else inside him and outside. Something that you can never touch or explain. Something that is inside you, maybe. But inside him, definitely. Trying to get cool on a hot night. Or warm on a cold night. That's how trying to find this elusive quality is. Kenny was talking now. To himself. To the gray day with the sky a personal memory given upward to hold other lost boys on their own particular quests in this snow country forever amen. Maybe he was talking to me. To someone else long gone or to come to tomorrow and leaving me far behind, stumbling, stuttering, with no one to help me up or hold me or be with me. He was talking about the snowfields of California, circa 1850. We saw a movie once about that. We thought it would be nice to be in that huge empty country of then, and all the echoes of history that must resound through it. He talked dreams. And dream talk is always the best. There was a small strand of hair escaped the net of his toboggan, that made a comma of ragged sorts on his forehead. How I longed to reach over and brush that comma. To reach over and to touch his face and warm it with my chapped hands. We were lovers of cold and somberness. We were lovers of all the things you think you would like to escape from. But we reveled in them. If it was lonely and lost like a stray kitten, these were our provinces. And Kenny was not a ghost. And neither was I. Those who had power over us, now they were ghosts but they were too stupid to realize it. You could see straight through them. Transparent as glass. Kenny and I talk about that, and laughed about that, often. "If you're not a ghost, no one can make you one just on their say so," Kenny and his little high piping voice. "Ghosts have a right to exist too. More than they." Then we would lose ourselves in the conundrum, the thread of the thought would be gone, but we would have each other and that would be worlds enough for us. He strayed. He never sat in classes. But he was waiting for me after the end of the day, and we would run to the quad and then off the quad to a football field nearby, and the world was our oyster, and Kenny was the pearl and I feared one day soon that world oyster taking him back like he had never been at all. And then he would be a ghost. Then he would be a revenant. And so would I. Cut off from each other ever after. They don't value us at this school. Not any of their charges. They partake of us. They own us. Own our problems. That of course are never ever theirs. They rearrange things in our minds. They tell us what to think and how to think and what not to think and how not to think. They are absolutely relentless in this. Kenny is the only thing that keeps me sane. Though they say otherwise. Though they don't know what they are talking about. Before our parents tossed us aside because they had other things to do, Kenny and I were together anyway. We talked about this a lot. We had dreamt of each other. We had pretended at each other. At night we would, in our beds, amidst our parents' fighting and throwing things and saying things like "Who the hell told you to get pregnant in the first place I bet he's not even mine!!" that would be answered with a retort like "Ever heard of a condom, Ace?", and alone alone, we would hold each other to invisible us. We birthed each other from our tears, and our terrors and our insecurities. Somehow I got to be a "real" boy. And Kenny got to be on the outside, a suspect. A miscreant wanderer who never studied with us. Never slept in the open dorm room. Never choir sang with us. Was there only for me. But I on the inside, was on the outside too. That was what drew us to each other. That was our starting point. "When I fall in love, it will be forever, or I'll never fall in love." Kenny sang that now as we lay in our beloved snow country. He said it was a record he heard his mother play once. She said it was from a long time ago, from her own girlhood. The singer, Kenny said, was Nat King Cole. Kenny said he had the loveliest voice, that it broke the boy's heart and made him vow to do what the song said. Then Kenny turned to me, slowly. His eyes looked at mine. He smiled easily in all that snow coming down round. He held my hand tightly and then he held me and I pushed myself next to him. We lay on our sides close together, our bulky clothes and coats getting in the way. We vowed our love. And that it would be forever. They build sad kids mean. And they build mean kids sad. It is a double book end kind of thing. There is never one without the other. Except for Kenny and me. We were too frightened to be mean, though perhaps others took it as passivity. There was no meanness in us, though. There was that all round us. The other kids gave us the business too, because they were so lonely they could die. We tried to understand, but never could. The classes were dictatorial. We were lectured to. Yelled at constantly by the teachers, all of us. We learned Latin and Spanish and Physics and Geometry and how to say yes sir and no ma'am and thank you very much. We learned to sit in the drafty cafeteria with the long tables and the industrial prison processed food and we learned to like the taste of cardboard. In the open dorm room, the boys sometimes played with each other after lights out, or played with themselves or whispered or just cursed or threatened what they would be doing to this teacher that psychologist when they had the chance by god. Some of the boys cried in the dorm room. They tried to hide it. I cried and tried to hide it. But I got the business from some of the bullies anyway. I learned to cry without sound there in the darkness and the void. But they knew it anyway. And lay in wait for me. The counselor's office, where I spend a great deal of my free time such as it is, and me looking out the window at Kenny waiting in the snow for me to run to him, was cheerless and bleak and utilitarian as the rest of this place, Mr. Michelman, which reminded me of Michelmas which reminded me of Xmas which I do not write as Christmas because I do not believe in Jesus no matter how many masses they force us to go to, no matter how many Hail Marys I am given at confessional to say. Indeed, all of that liturgy and punishment of the spirit and the "soul" if we have such things turns me against the whole business, if you want to know the truth. A delusory man Mr. Michelman. A bore of a man Mr. Michelman. Mr. Michelman of reality and sunless depths Mr. Michelman. A man who wants me to face reality. So I look out the window, defiantly, with him wondering what I looked at, where I wanted so much to be, with him in the snow, staring at the building, the window, me, and smiling at me in his don't give up and give in smile; "not that Kenny again?" Mr. Michelman asked, exasperated. I tend to make people quite exasperated. I slipped early on, when I was tricked into thinking these people really cared about us, and mentioned Kenny, my one true friend, and I wanted to brag about knowing such a great guy; for once I was supremely happy, but they shot that down without even looking at me; and from thenceforward Mr. Michelman and the other counselors--who have little to do with me; I am Mr. Michelman's popinjay--but the bastards can't seem to keep their big mouths shut, and gossip about all of us-- have taunted me and slyly made me feel like a dope about it ever since; I'd confess everything to Adolph Hitler before I'd say one more word to these stilted lying avaricious superior adults again, who know so much by knowing nothing at all. I said nothing, so he pulled the brown curtains closed on my view of Kenny. He had to let me go in an hour. He had other kids he had to pretend to help. He needed the illusion of helping so much, I guess none of us had the heart, even the meanest kids, to explain reality to him. So he stayed in his bubble and knitted all his life like Madame Lafarge, like all the other counselors did; more fragile far than us. So, afterwards, I would run to my love. He would smile and laugh and wave me to him. This dim shadow in a world of shadows, this dim shadow that burned so brightly. And we would be safe with each other. Like here and now. As we lay in the snow, side by side. Holding each other in case the world started spinning too fast and we were thrown off so we would be thrown off together, and like Robert Frost said about a different situation, "that would have made all the difference." Except for our hands when we made snow angels, we had never touched before, Kenny and me. I never feared for an instant he would be unreal or that I would see through him the snowfields stretching out and the sky gray and daunting and endlessly. He was soft hearted and he was full of heat that spread to my far colder body even through our coats and clothes. He put his face beside mine and I closed my eyes and swallowed hard a couple of times. I put my hands to his back, to where his shoulder blades were, though of course I could not feel them. I guess I had hoped to find wings back there to take me home for I so wanted that. "We'll run away to California," Kenny said, "we can't go back in time. But we could live in the mountains where there's snow. And we could learn how to prospect for gold. We could pan gold in the streams. We could live off the land and build ourselves a neat snug cabin and nobody would know where we were or care, yeah, like they would care anyway. And in our hearts, deep inside, we'd be--" Kenny paused here, not sure if he was to be laughed at or not; even the toughest brashest of boys are shy creatures, diffident creatures, larkspuring one minute, and the next, afraid they have given away everything they have, and it turns out to be just for a moment of some stranger's time, and you have nothing left then to go back to inside yourself. He finished it anyway, eyes closed, knowing the sound of a dream dying, "In our hearts we'd be--ah--married." He waited. He closed in on himself. He knew I would run away. Okay, this, maybe he was a ghost. Maybe he was a ghost of a boy from a long time ago or a short time ago that something horrible happened to. Maybe he was a dream. Maybe he was waiting to be born and depended on solely me for that. So quick as a wink, I said, "I love you Kenny Haden. I love you and love you and love you." I may have said it a million times. He smiled shyly at me, and then we were up and off and giddy and singing and making snowballs and tossing them at each other and we ran off into the night come, and the day, what there had been of it, seeping through, was turned off and the football field where we ran in and ran from was quiet and still and there was no one there. No one at all. Mr. Michelman stood by his office window, idly fingering the curtain drawstring. He looked out that window and wished there wasn't such a heavy emptiness out there. Wished he could see some life. Wished spring would return so boys would play football again and he could watch them and love them on the quiet in the secrecy of his mind and the longing of his heart. He went to his filing cabinet, sighed dyspeptically, and opened the cabinet to the H's. He tried to find Haden or Hayden or Heden or something like that. But none of the combinations presented him with any name close to that. He closed the cabinet, a bit too hardly, making the green metallic thing clatter its files and drawers some. Where exactly did that name come to him? Why should it be repeating itself over and again? Then he sat at his desk. He got out his paper and picked up his quill pen, tapping the head of it against his lips. He was writing a monograph when he had some free time. He wished at this very moment the stagecoach would make more stops here. He wished he could get on one and go back East. He wished the books he had ordered would get here soon on that damn stagecoach. They were all he had to hold back the ultimate. He wished he hadn't been mad enough to go with the wagon train to California. It was so vast and deep and lonely here. You could travel hundreds of miles and not see a soul, a cabin, no sign of human habitation. Everything was so very far away from everything else. And the winters were unbearable. The winters chills could drive a person half mad; and the snows were so deep in these mountains, you could lose your horse and buckboard and yourself in them, and never be found till spring thaw, long away. The points on a compass seemed not to exist out here. It was impossibly easy to get lost. And what oddness there was too, seeing snow on cacti and cow skulls and hearing all those deuced owls calling all night long, and you wonder if they are owls or if they are Indians. He was a school teacher was Mr. Michelman. He only had one suit, his Sunday go to meeting one, with his vest in the pocket of which he kept his grandfather's pocket watch to remind him of home, the pocket watch that he held often, that he clung to, as to his own personal talisman. To remind him of --more "civilized"--New York City where he had grown up and lived his young and young adult life in all that closeness and tenement buildings. No room to breathe. No room to move. And the horse manure, the flies' and maggots' and bugs' closest friend in the necessity of survival known as feeding off what you can find, in the streets piled up pretty big there and the smell was always rancid. In summer, god, you didn't even want to remember what that had been like, and crossing the street had been a nightmare. So he had come here to be a teacher, to find the wide open spaces, and god help me I have, he thought. He lit the candle on his desk. The room flared into stippled wavery reddish gold light. He saw his charges here. The ones now and the ones that had been and the ones that would be. They were farmers' and storekeepers' and sharecroppers' and ranchers' children.. They were recalcitrant boys and girls from five different counties. They were--troubled. God, how could they not be? And in this small school building he was supposed to teach them what children should be taught. They were sad. They were mean. And joyed in playing all kinds of devilment on each other. Though never on Mr. Michelman who was to say the least a stern taskmaster. Because of the wide distances in this place, some of the children, who lived fifty miles from here or more, came only very infrequently or mostly, not at all, learning their real lessons from the world school that lasts a lifetime of hard knocks, while other children showed up more regularly, but unexpectedly, raggedly, having to work on the farms, having to help their parents with planting, taking care of their cattle or hogs, their horses, having to help with the harvesting, tending the land, tending stores, begging sustenance for one more day in this long lost tiresome backbreaking country. Mr. Michelman sat back. He stretched his arms. They had runaways sometimes. Of course you never really called them that. You never could know at all, until the frantic parents came in their buckboards or on their horses that were grand, though more often not, to spread their wiry fears to him about their missing sons. The girls never ran away. They were not allowed dreams, but why would they have them anyway, if they were never allowed the slightest chance of acting them out? Mr. Michelman was grateful for that at least. Even though he lived hand to mouth on the small pittance he was paid to take other people's children into his charge. Kenny and--what was his name again?--Mr. Michelman checked his records in the candle light on this snowy blowy cold as ice winter evening early on--yes, Bobby, Bobby Dreedman, though shouldn't it have been Haden or Hayden? No, why did Mr. Michelman have that name on the brain? The two kids picked on the most. How many school yard fights had Mr. Michelman broken up, the other kids beating Kenny and Bobby half senseless, the two boys never fighting back, just looking at each other, eyes locked, as though they were taking sustenance from one another. They had left, run away perhaps, or had been swallowed by this endless country, two months ago. Kenny's parents were frantic. They promised never to fight in their son's presence again. A bit too late for that, Mr. Michelman thought, musing as he stroked his heavy gray streaked beard. Bobby's parents had never shown up. Mr. Michelman had never laid eyes on them. But if Kenny was gone, so was Bobby. They were always together. They always would be, in some form or another. He would go home tonight. He would go home and he would sit by the fire and he would read a book, a real leather bound book, not one of those dreadful penny dreadfuls who also came at such a premium out here that he was learning to like even them; and he would sleep under his heavy blankets in the coldness of his cabin. Outside the owls would hoot. Or maybe it would be Indians pretending at being owls. Pretending so well that they had become them. Or maybe it was just Kenny and--yes, Bobby--playing midnight games with him. He always had trouble remembering Bobby's name especially for some reason, like he was a spectral, not exactly real, a visitor to this time that Kenny was already in. Like Kenny was lonely and had no one, so one day Bobby appeared out of the clear blue. Like Kenny had written him a letter or something, that said come here. And Bobby was--different in some odd way, different than all the others. Like he had come from a peculiar unreal backward almost primitive place and never could get used to the modern accouterments of the world around him, such as there were. They left him in the dark. The simplest things he had to be taught over and again to do. And Kenny took this too strange Bobby, that the other kids hooted about, even more than they did Kenny, under his wing, taught him with gentleness, how to do things here, like how to saddle a horse, how to read the Bible in Latin, and with the teaching Kenny became more at ease with himself, seemed far happier, and Bobby seemed the same as he friend, more and more. Until they disappeared. Wherever they are, Mr. Michelman said, almost like he was whispering a prayer, wherever you are, Kenny and Bobby, be well and because you have each other, perhaps you will be. Perhaps. Then Mr. Michelman prepared to go home. His horse at the rail whinnied, time to hook me up to the buckboard and get me home to the barn and some hay; time for you to curry me and feed me some sugar cubes, come on, don't leave me in the snow all night, Mr. Michelman fancied his horse was thinking, if horses and other dumb animals can think, you stay in the snow and cold too long you die. Mr. Michelman had his coat on and put his scarf round his neck, then put on his cowboy hat, pulled it down low, and walked out into the nor'easter, blown he was and buffeted by the wind, snow crystals blowing almost horizontal, thunking him on his large nose, and thinking, as he petted his horse's powerful neck, made it whinny again and made it start to dance a bit with impatience, maybe you don't die in the snow and cold and sleet and pounding night, maybe, he said to himself and his painted horse, as he brought it to the buckboard and adjusted everything, maybe it's just the opposite. He was a man who could admit when he was wrong. He hadn't always been that way. Something had happened once. Vaguely. Like a dim image of a snow angel a boy or more than one boy had made in the snow drifts a long time ago or somewhere up ahead, some distant misty time the eye can't see or imagine just yet. Yes, he was a man who could change his mind and be open to other views. How could he ever have been any other way? He got on the buckboard, lowered himself on the cold seat, then pulled the reigns, as he and the horse joggled their way through the snow that was heavy laden and more heavy falling, blocking the known world out, making the blue cold soundlessness of white and wintry all the world there was. Except for the break heart sounds of the owls at play in the trees of night and winter long ago now. Timothy Stillman B Keeper silvershimmer@earthlink.net