Camille didn’t repeat the words. Almost wearily, she began unbuttoning her sweater, but Sister Lucy stopped her.
“Camille, I want to speak with you in private. Please go to the principal’s office and wait there for me.”
This time, Camille complied immediately. As she rose and left class without another word, the half-unbuttoned sweater gave us a flash of a bosom worthy of Marilyn Monroe. It didn’t look natural on her, but I remember thinking, What if those aren’t falsies Camille was concealing?
“BB zizboombah!” Norky saluted, and Camille’s lips retracted in what may have passed for a smile.
Afterward, we learned that, instead of the principal’s office, Camille had gone to our small school library, where a senile nun named Sister Angelica presided over the books. Camille didn’t demand her old illustrated novels back. She checked them out on library cards and left, never to return. That was the last time I saw her, but hardly the last time I thought about her.
By junior year in high school, my earlier fascination with stories from Greek mythology evolved into an addiction to science fiction. I’d read on the bus to and from school, and sometimes late into the night, and each Saturday I’d stop for a new fix of sci-fi at the Gad’s Hill Library, which had also been my father’s neighborhood library. Sometimes, I’d imagine him going there when he was my age. He’d told me that as a kid he’d read every Hardy Boys mystery on the shelves but that, after reading a biography of Andrew Carnegie, he realized reading novels was impractical, a way for daydreamers to waste time. I decided to read every book in the science fiction section.
One sleeting, gray afternoon, sitting at a window table in Gad’s Hill, reading Ray Bradbury’s Illustrated Man, I came upon a story called “The Man,” about earth voyagers to a distant planet who just miss Christ’s appearance there. The captain vows to keep questing after the Man until he finds him. “I’ll go on to another world,” he says. “And another and another. I’ll miss him by half a day on the next planet, maybe, and a quarter of a day on the third planet, and two hours on the next, and an hour on the next, and a minute on the next. But after that, one day I’ll catch up with him!”
There were no hooved Centaurians, but the idea of following Christ from world to world was so reminiscent of Camille’s story that I couldn’t help wondering if she’d stolen it. Or if, by seventh grade, her imagination was already the equal of Bradbury’s. I recalled the afternoon when the two of us stood beating erasers, and Camille confided that she’d done penance for stories — stories that I’ll never know if she wrote or only imagined writing. She’d wanted me to tell her a secret from my dreams, a secret from dreams I hadn’t had as yet, and so I didn’t quite understand what she was after.
“It’s about feeling,” Camille had insisted.
I didn’t understand then that she was talking about risk.
There’s a recurrent dream that visits me less and less frequently. I first had it after my father took ill. In the dream, I’m pulling the red sled, but not loaded with a Christmas tree. What I’m hauling is an automobile battery, just as we actually did once in winter when my father’s Plymouth died at the factory lot. Rather than spend money to have a wrecker come out and jump it, he unbolted the Atlas battery and caught a ride home with a fellow employee. He left the battery at a gas station to be recharged, and after supper we walked to the gas station with the sled. The grease monkey — as my father called mechanics — said he couldn’t guarantee the battery would hold a charge, and in this subzero weather the safest thing was to buy a new one. My father didn’t even bother to ask what he soaked for it.
The old sled creaked when my father set the battery on it. He cautioned that we had to be very careful not to tip out the battery acid and told me to center the battery on the sled. I couldn’t even budge it.
“You practice lifting that, sonnyboy, and you’ll become Charles Atlas.” He laughed. “Nobody will kick sand in your face.” Then he repositioned it and we began the long trek back to the factory lot.
A curfew of cold had emptied the streets. It was probably approaching my bedtime — unusual for my father to have kept me out late, but that was how it happened, as if something important was going on. We crossed Rockwell, a border between blocks of apartment buildings and blocks of factories. Past Rockwell, the total absence of trees gave the industrial-strength streetlights a bluish glare that made the temperature seem to drop another few degrees. Even in summer the cracked, fissured sidewalks could be treacherous, as if a localized quake had occurred along these miles of truck docks, warehouses, and abandoned factories. Snow piled up unshoveled all winter. We took turns tugging the sled through the drifts and over mounds of dirty ice, one of us pulling, the other steadying the battery. I secretly wouldn’t have minded the sled tipping, as it repeatedly threatened to, because I wanted to see the reaction between battery acid and snow. Wind bored to marrow, and my feet in rubber galoshes and fingers in rabbit-furlined gloves went achingly numb. My face felt raw and chapped from the woolen scarf I’d raised like a mask, and I began worrying that the battery would be dead when we got to the car, that the engine wouldn’t turn over, and that we’d have to lug the battery all the way back to the gas station. I don’t remember a word of what we said as we walked, if we said anything at all, and yet there wasn’t a time when I felt closer to my father.
In the dream, I’m tugging the sled alone, and, without my father along, the effort seems increasingly senseless. Knee-deep in drifts, navigating mounded ice, I glance back to make sure the load hasn’t tipped, and in the squint of streetlights realize that it’s my father, blue with cold and reduced to an ancient child the compressed weight of a battery, which I’m pulling.
Who knows why certain humble objects — a bike, a sweater, a sled — are salvaged by memory or dream to become emblems of childhood? Childhood, an alternative universe expanding into forgetfulness, where memory rather than matter is the stuff of creation.
At the end of each day at St. Roman, classes would be released in order of seniority, so Chester would have to wait for Ralphie’s class to let out. He’d wait for Ralphie on the corner by the church. If it was raining, he’d have an umbrella already opened. Chester was the only boy at school with something as sissyish as an umbrella. At least it was a black umbrella. Then, he and his brother, Ralphie, walked home down Washtenaw together, engaged in their secret conversations.
Once, the spring after Ralphie died, I was released early from detention because the April afternoon was darkened by the total eclipse of a thunderstorm. The corridors were empty, all the classes had already fled home. Outside, I noticed from a half block away that Chester stood on the corner waiting with an open umbrella. He must have stayed to watch the younger kids file out. And he was still there waiting after they’d gone. Although I saw Chester in school every day, I really hadn’t talked to him since Ralphie died. We’d paid our condolences as a class, but I’d been feeling vaguely guilty around Chester for not having said something on my own, though of course there seemed nothing to say. It was raining hard enough that when I held my history book over my head I could feel as well as hear the drumming rain. I didn’t realize until I walked past him that Chester was crying. Maybe he thought no one would notice in the rain. Or maybe he didn’t realize it himself, as he made no attempt to conceal his tears.
“You’re getting soaked,” he said and gave the umbrella a little lift meaning that he’d share it.
“I’m okay,” I said. “I got my book, but thanks.”