I can’t imagine you will think well of me after what I am about to confess. Truthfully I’m not doing this to clear my conscience, I’ve made peace with the fact that I did some rotten things when I should have known better. I suppose I’m sharing this in an effort to create a more honest representation of my young life after the previous posts. Make no mistake, I was a thoughtful and sensitive child, but I was also a dumb kid capable of doing things that make me cringe in retrospect.
I had a partner in this, an older kid from around the corner. I was 12 at the time which would have made Shawn 15 or so. He was a big, rough kid who would have made a fine addition to our small towns struggling highschool football program, but Shawn had asthma that kept him from most forms of athletics. I was sensitive to this plight and when he would get gassed out I would hang back with him while the other kids in the neighborhood ran around, uncaring about the fact that medically Shawn couldn’t keep up. I say I did this out of empathy, but I was also using this opportunity to win favor with someone who normally would have dismissed me as a potential friend due to my age and nerdy qualities.
Shawn was cool, “wicked cool” as we would say, he was also a royal shithead. He had fought with my older brother, blown up toads with fireworks, taught us all kinds of “facts of life” stuff we had no business knowing, and was generally a bad influence. He was just one of those shitball kids who would later grow into a shitball man. As far as I know he’s still in that same neighborhood, in that same run down house, catching the occasional charge for dope slinging; really taking advantage of the opioid crisis that’s devastating huge portions of Southern New Hampshire. Like many quaint small towns across America without much going on, heroin has become the Great Pastime for once thriving commuter cities not far from major metropolitan areas.
Shawn grew to like me in those younger years, he taught me how to throw and catch, allowed me to look at the pornography in his tree house, he even once invited me to walk to the school to watch a baseball game with him. I became so excited by the idea and the permission granted by my mother (who, frankly seemed relieved that her bookish kid had an interest in something other than dragons) that I ended up not being able to go after all when I started throwing up all over myself. It was nerves. Similarly, not too many years later when I was to attend my first concert I became very anxious thinking that I would surely lose my virginity there. I had all of these strange notions about how life worked due to my sheltered upbringing. My parents exposed me to a lot of stuff, just not the stuff that would end up defining me as an adult, like film, music, and art. I had no idea that baseball games were boring, and that going to a punk show is not how one typically gets laid.
Anyway, Shawn kept coming around, while I was rarely allowed to leave the yard for extended periods this didn’t prevent Shawn from joining us in wiffle ball, or pitching around his Nerf football, one with a tail on it that would allow even an untrained arm to cast out long bombs that would spiral through the air like we knew what we were doing. My little brother, 5 years my junior would even be able to join, and along with him we added my direct neighbor Sammy.
Sammy was a pretty wild kid, foul mouthed and seemingly aware of life beyond his young age. He, like my brother, was barely old enough to be attending elementary school. He was the kind of problematic kid that had a spot with us only for lack of other viable options. There were plenty of kids around, but the aloof qualities that have been cited as the defining characteristic of my generation were already apparent in my local peer group. The other kids had stuff to do indoors that didn’t involve sweat, itchy grass, and hanging with the refuse of the neighborhood. For all I knew these kids had been instructed to stay away from me, perhaps through osmosis I had acquired the same reputation that Shawn was already developing in that little loop of stubby homes on the hill.
Sammy didn’t have the kind of parenting that might protect him from kids like us. He and his parents lived with his grandmother and grandfather, but we rarely saw them. I had heard rumors that his father had shot a man a few years back. His grandparents seemed kindly enough, but they didn’t want us running on their grass, so my yard became the place we would do our thing. We were fenced in on one side, the backside barrier was a line of impossibly tall pine trees, with a bushy hedge on the other side. This backyard was all boxed in by the house and the garage that housed the hens. It was in many ways a perfect place to play, generally flat and soft enough that if you fell (and you would fall) the grass and soil would absorb much of the impact.
We did have the ongoing issue of fouling the ball off over the fenced side. The fence didn’t exist as part of our yard, it was a town requirement as there was an inground pool in the neighboring yard, owned and maintained by a woman named Michael, just like me. She was ok, but if we popped a foul and jumped the fence to retrieve the ball she would dress us down, admonishing us for trespassing. She rightly feared the lawsuit that would follow one of us falling in the pool and dying, or some other concern that seemed outlandish to us in our youth. She would tell us to knock and have her grab the ball, but if we were to take that approach we would have been at the place constantly. We ended up moving to the other side of the yard, but then the delight of a “homerun” became a collective groan from all as one of us would have to be elected to knock on Michael’s door. Eventually we tried to agree to a “no homers” rule that Shawn refused to follow, saying it was impossible for him to pull his swing, he was just too strong. Really though Shawn was the only one who would have needed to adjust, the rest of us too small and unrefined to hit a homer with any regularity.
Sammy desperately wanted to be respected so he was constantly jockeying for position, mostly by picking at my little brother Steven. He knew he couldn’t get away with much if he were to come at his older, bigger, playmates like Shawn and I, so Steve became his target. During football he would get rough with him, he would cuss him out, and at times get bold enough to try his hand at Steve in fisticuffs. Steve didn’t need anyone to defend him, already significantly bigger than Sammy (Steve now stands at 6’7” and had a beard fit for the Viking warship) and handy with the fists from having two brothers who would periodically test him in martial combat. But, being that this was my brother and that Sammy was just some shitbird kid that we hung out with out of some compulsory need to round out teams; I didn’t cut any slack and would often end up whooping on Sammy to remind him of his role in our backyard hierarchy. Shawn seemed to really enjoy such moments, egging on both sides equally until it became physical (usually briefly, with wrestling and choking being the primary violent engagement) and Sammy either retreated home or would cool his jets.
We all knew that Sammy, like Shawn was asthmatic. While Shawn got by with a couple puffs off of his inhaler, Sammy had this whole mask situation he had to do a couple times a day it seemed. It looked like an oxygen mask from TV and would puff out thick, milky, plumes of vapor. He needed to wear it for several minutes and more than once we left him behind, youthful impatience not allowing even a few moments delay once plans were set. If we did go out we would have to scamper off home by the time the streetlights came on, so time was a commodity we couldn’t spare, even if it meant leaving Sammy out entirely.
I don’t recall Sammy ever losing his wind like Shawn would, maybe that mask was something Shawn really could have used too, or maybe Sammy was just so damned determined to find his place in the pack that he refused to ever allow us to see such a thing. Sammy was actually kind of a bad ass now that I look back on it, a real turd maybe, but he was tough as hell.
One day he and Steve were starting to get into it and uncharacteristically Shawn broke up a scrum between the two. Incredibly he said was sick of the violence. He had something else in mind, a more gentlemanly way to settle the dispute.
“We’re gonna do a decathlon.” Shawn said, like we were all supposed to know what that meant. I was vaguely familiar with the term, but I didn’t actually know what events comprised such a thing. “10 challenges, 10 tests of strength, endurance, and agility. Winner take all.” What the winner would take was never questioned and would remain unidentified. It was actually a brilliant way to end the fight because suddenly the three of us were all so enthralled at the idea of a decathlon that the dispute became unimportant.
“I’m gonna be Sammy’s coach and Mike is gonna be Steve’s.” Even then I hated being called “Mike” but whatever- DECATHLON!
“We go to 10, each one is worth 1 point. Who ever wins more events is the… winner.” Shawn continued, we were all glad that he was being thorough, it seemed like he knew exactly what he was talking about and we were glad to have someone so worldly in our clique.
“Now, before we start I need a coaches meeting, you guys start stretching out, we will be right with you.” Shawn said authoritatively, then grabbed me around the shoulder and pulled me along to the side yard by the oak tree that was a haven for the hated and reviled gypsy moth caterpillars.
“I’m gonna make sure Steve wins.” Shawn said with a wry grin, quietly so the guys couldn’t hear.
“How ya gonna do that?” I said. I didn’t think Steve needed any unfair advantage, but I was all ears.
“I’m gonna wear his ass out. His asthma will get him, it’ll be cake!” Shawn said devilishly, I just smiled back, unsure of what the plan was still but not wanting to look like I wasn’t keeping up.
We returned to our competitors. I didn’t know what to do so I just had Steve stretch out, meanwhile Sammy was kicking out burpees while Shawn, as his coach barked encouragement. The burpee is essentially a form of torture, if you’ve ever had the misfortune of doing them, you too will know the torment and toll it takes. After a couple sets of burpees Shawn saw fit to initiate the first round of the decathlon, a sprint to the end of the yard and back.
Sammy was visibly sucking wind already as he lined up against Steve, and the pair took completely untrained three point positions at the imaginary starting like. Shawn counted down from 3 and they took off.
Being bigger was a disadvantage in this event, but Steve was able to trounce Sammy without issue in what may have otherwise been a pretty close race. Back at the start Steve was awarded his first point and Sammy was commanded to do a set of 50 jumping jacks.
“You’re just not warmed up yet, now beat your face!” Shawn shouted, echoing something he had heard at football tryouts. In this case “beating your face” amounted to push-ups, it was a new term for me. Once Sammy could do no more, it was on to the next part of the decathlon which was the long jump. After Steve made short work of him in that one it was immediately followed by the triple jump, and again the already exhausted Sammy came up short, in one part due to having all the gas sucked from his tank, in other part simply by being physically smaller than my brother.
The events continued on and eventually the coaching sessions became even more intense, at times with all three of us shouting at him to do more and more strenuous prep work between events. To his credit Sammy was keeping up with the demands. Sammy didn’t win a single event, and as we celebrated Steve’s gold medal, Sammy slumped under that gnarly old oak tree panting like a dog, his face blotchy with reddened cheeks, and a very pale hue elsewhere. His lips were purple and he said very little. Sammy was right there on the edge of a significant asthma attack.
I don’t feel good about this, this is just one of those things that dumb kids do prior to the development of a well defined moral compass. At the time I felt no remorse, but looking back on it this was incredibly cruel. The very thing that enabled me to forge a kind of friendship with Shawn was being taken advantage of and I was unable to see how heartless and stupid I had been to allow such a thing to happen. Sammy recovered without a major medical issue, but it did take some time for him to rise and find his legs again.
We continued to play and Sammy, being as young as he was, never realized how he had worked over by a couple of idiots. He was happy to have been coached by the oldest and coolest among us, and that is the way of kids. We just want to be seen, and in Sammy’s case I don’t know that he got a lot of that from his father.
I didn’t learn anything from this situation at the time, there is no great moral victory here, and on the scale of bad things I’ve done it doesn’t really rank, all’s well that ends well right? Sammy didn’t get killed by the neighborhood kids… but this is one of those memories that pops up every once in awhile and chills me in the same way a close call with a bad car accident might haunt you, a dodged bullet.
This was not the last time I would be the bullet.