Read Educating Simon Online

Authors: Robin Reardon

Educating Simon (31 page)

BOOK: Educating Simon
4.99Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

And then a word flew into my mind.
Invalidated.
I felt as though my own time with Luther, my own experience, my own specialness—even if it wasn't supposed to last in any significant way for us as a couple—had been invalidated. Luther's scheduling multiple partners for sex on the same day denied the importance of two individuals merging, becoming one. We're not just animals, and sex to us should have more than mere physical implications. I'm not talking about commitment, here, but sex the way I want it should blur the lines that separate two people, even for just a few moments. And there's something sacred about that, nothing to do with religion or scripture or some old man in the sky watching over us. Maybe it's the reversing of that duality, that subject-object split that happened in the universe's first exhalation. It's God breathing in again.

I shook myself; this was way, way too esoteric for me. I took another deep breath, released my own exhalation, and walked back through the shape. My thoughts bounced around randomly on the reverse journey; I was mostly trying to imagine what my next conversation with Luther—if any—would be like. I ran through a number of scenarios, none of which led to anything satisfactory unless I allowed myself the luxury of telling him all those spiritual thoughts that had come to me in the rose centre. And that seemed both unlikely and ill-advised, even if he is studying philosophy.

I sat on one of the benches under the trees, feeling decidedly chilled and not really caring, when I decided to pull out my phone and turn it on again. And there was a voice message from Luther, from twenty minutes ago, probably when I was halfway into the labyrinth.

“Call me.” That's all. Not “I'm sorry that happened” or “I hope you're not upset.”

I put the phone into my pocket and sat back. Remembering that when Michael had changed his mind about coming to my rooftop for antipasto, I'd been very careful to give him the impression that it didn't matter to me either way. I could take that approach with Luther. But it had been dishonest then, to Michael, and it would be dishonest now. And whatever else I could accuse Luther of, dishonesty was not on the list.

I could ignore his message completely; that would be one way to let him know I didn't like being treated that way. But the fact was that I didn't like him treating Stephanie that way, either. I tried to put myself in her place. What if
she'd
been with him since eleven, and
I'd
shown up early for my date at half one, and the two of them had been standing there kissing?

Bisexuality notwithstanding, commitment-bound or not, I would have turned around and left.

I pulled my phone out and called him.

“Simon. Thanks for calling. Will you let me explain?”

“There's not much need to explain, really. It's pretty obvious what happened. The only thing I don't know, and I'm not sure it matters to me, is what your relationship is like with her. All I can know is how it makes
me
feel.”

I paused, and he waited a few seconds before asking, “And how is that?”

“Invalidated.”

“Simon, I never promised—”

“No. That's true. And I never expected. I wasn't looking for you to declare undying love, or any love at all. I wasn't hoping you'd dream about me for days and have to hold yourself back from begging to see me again. That's not what this was about, and I accepted that.”

“Then . . . why invalidated?”

“I think you knew this was my first time. That alone made it incredibly special to me, whomever it was with. Now, if Stephanie hadn't shown up early, I'd never have known about your second date. But the fact that you were cramming two liaisons into one day cuts the importance of each of them at least in half. I can't help wondering how you thought you'd have time to shower, let alone change the sheets.”

“We were going out.”

“And then?”

“Then we were going over to her place. Her sheets.”

I nodded, though of course he couldn't know that. “You had it all figured out, then. Well, I've figured out a few things, too. I really enjoyed this morning. Thanks for that. But I don't think I want to do this again. I appreciate your honesty; I just don't like your style.”

I rang off, half expecting he'd ring me back, but after three minutes of staring at my phone I put it back into my pocket. Then I took it out again and looked up the location of the nearest T stop.

And I think that's all I want to write for now.

Boston, Sunday, 18 November

I talked with Ned about Luther as soon as I could get him to myself, which turned out to be last Tuesday afternoon. I sat at the island and he listened as he worked, occasionally asking a clarifying question but nothing else. I told him about the sex (with very little detail), about the labyrinth walk, and I stopped after describing that last phone conversation. He finished up something he was working on and wiped his hands on a towel.

“Do you remember what I told you about him?”

“I do. And you were right.”

“Tell me about that epiphany again. The one in the labyrinth, about sex being the remerging of the two dualities God had divided into in the beginning of the universe.”

“Is that how I put it?”

“Not quite; but isn't that what you meant?”

I shrugged. “I guess so, yes. But I wouldn't read too much into it. The ramblings of a wounded ego.”

“No. That's not it at all. You're on to something important. Have you ever heard the song called “Hallelujah” by Leonard Cohen? Made famous by a number of singers, most especially Jeff Buckley?” I shook my head, and he stumbled through a few lyrics that didn't seem to gel. “Oh, hell, just go to YouTube and search for it. I think it will resonate with you.”

I toyed with a few crumbs I'd dropped as I'd devoured a piece of Mum's gingerbread.

“You okay, kid?”

I lifted a shoulder. “Yeah.” I grinned at him. “At least I'm not a virgin anymore.”

“Oh, honey, you have no idea. But—all in good time. Now, git; I need a moment alone with some burnt sugar. It wants all my attention or it turns vicious.”

Upstairs I did search YouTube, and I found the Jeff Buckley video, and I did listen to it. And then I listened to it again. And then I opened another tab and searched for the lyrics so I could follow along.

If it weren't for one particular verse, I'm not sure I would have understood what Ned had been talking about. I replayed it several times, dragging the little circle back over the progress bar.
Remember when I moved in you, and the holy dove was moving too, and every breath we drew was Hallelujah
.

I'm not fooling myself that what I had with Luther—that what I would ever have had with Luther—would even approach this. But I think I did the right thing, turning my back on a relationship that was deliberately set up to be the exact opposite, to be full of dead ends, to confound the hallelujah deliberately. I want love to be a labyrinth, not a maze. And I think sex, for me, has to at least point in that direction.

 

I've been so wrapped up in this situation with Luther, and so short on time generally, that I realise I've overlooked recording the fallout from the practice bee on 1 November. When I'd met with Kay on 8 November, she'd confirmed what I had suspected about her anxiety during the bee, that it was Dean and the other transgender people he'd brought with him who had thrown her off her game. She's scared to death about coming out, and her friends and even her mother were there; how could she explain who Dean was if anyone asked? I'd got Dean's phone number before I left Longwood Towers, and I'd called him that evening to ask that he not come to the next bee. He was a little put out, but I know he understood. I'm concerned that he's pushing Kay too hard. Not that there's anything I can do about that.

Neither Dean nor the others showed up for the second bee, and Toby did much better. Top of the heap, in fact. And his mother was there again, which made him very happy; this time she saw him victorious. It calmed some of my own fears, too. Because if he did really badly in March, he wouldn't go to the nationals. How much of the blame would fall on me?

 

I should hear from Oxford any day about my interviews—how many, which colleges, what dates. I'm all at sixes and sevens with anxiety, waiting to hear. Thank the universe for Graeme. He loves me, he pleasures me, and with him it's hallelujah every time.

Boston, Monday, 19 November

I've been sitting here staring at this screen for nearly twenty minutes. The reason I don't know where to begin is that I've wasted all my hyperbolic language, all my melodrama, all my tragedy on things that were anything but tragic, compared to today. I've run out of ways to say “life sucks and then you die.”

I got a notice today. In the post. It was waiting for me when I got home from school, a true demon lying in wait to ambush me.

I can hardly bring myself to write this.

Oxford wait-listed me. No interview.

Of course, everyone in the house knew it had arrived before I even got home. And I'm sure they all expected it to say the same thing I expected it to say. That is, what I had finally convinced myself it would say. I stood in the kitchen, holding the letter, reading, with Mum and Ned looking on and ready to cheer. I read silently, and I don't think they could have said what it was that made my arms go stiff. So I had the grace of a few seconds to arrange my face, to prepare myself to say what I had to say aloud.

“Well, this is too bad,” I told them, fighting to make my voice sound normal. “I'm on the waiting list.” I stood there, immobilised, looking at the letter, knowing if I looked at anyone I would break down. I started to take a deep breath but quickly realised how much that would reveal that I didn't want to reveal about my true state of mind.

Mum made some motion towards me, but I shook my head ever so slightly and she froze. Desperate to keep my hands from shaking, I refolded the letter, forced it back into its envelope, and stuffed it into my school bag on the floor. As I hefted the bag I said, “Guess it's a good thing I applied to a few other schools.”

“Simon?” Mum called. I stopped but didn't turn. “I'm so very sorry.”

I could have said, “It's okay.” I could have said, “It's not your fault.” I could have said, “I think Princeton will be great for me.” But I didn't believe any of it. And I couldn't think of anything to say that wasn't a brutal opposite of all of those things. So I just left her standing there.

And now I'm upstairs, too intensely stunned even to swear. Too stunned for anger at Oxford, at Mum, at Brian, at anyone. There's some kind of odd static electricity running through me. It's not energising. It's making it almost impossible for me to move. Typing is the only activity I can manage. I don't remember climbing the stairs.

I also don't remember going into the bathroom, retrieving my black leather emergency kit with the razor blades, and setting that beside me on the desk. Even if I decide to use one of them, I wouldn't do it here, so why did I fetch it?

 

Evidently I didn't go down for dinner. I was sitting here, staring at the screen again, still, whatever, when Ned knocked. I hadn't heard the dumbwaiter, but he'd sent my dinner up in it. He carried up a folding tray, and he set things up on it for me.

“Turn the chair, kid. I'm not leaving till you've had some dinner.”

I turned my face in his direction, but I couldn't raise my eyes high enough to see his face. Couldn't muster the energy. He took hold of the chair from behind and positioned me at the tray. Then he sat in the reading chair, facing me.

I think he'd made some kind of chicken dish. There was a sauce. Maybe risotto, something with rice and mushrooms. No wine, I remember that. Maybe he figured it would only make matters worse.

“When you didn't appear for dinner, Miss Persie threw the worst tantrum I've seen since the day she nearly reamed Maxine with that notebook. Your mom's fit to be tied, ranting and forcibly stopping herself from saying unmentionable words. I think Brian's afraid to say much of anything, but there's a set to his jaw I've seen before. They're going to take some action, Simon. I don't know what. At the very least, they'll do whatever it takes to get an explanation.”

I tried to nod, but nothing happened. At that moment, I didn't care. I didn't care about anything.

He stood, picked up the fork from the tray, and pointed the handle towards me. “Do I have to feed you?”

I managed to grasp the fork. I wasn't trying to be a problem. I wasn't trying to look pathetic. It's just that I couldn't feel anything, couldn't do anything. Somehow I stabbed a green bean and nibbled at one end of it.

Ned was still standing there when my phone rang from inside my school bag. I made no move to get it, so he did. He read the display. “It says Metcalf.”

Suddenly I could move, but not towards the phone. In about three strides I got as far away from Ned as I could within the room, the window seat overlooking the roof. I pulled my feet up to my ass and hugged my knees hard.

I heard Ned say, “Simon's phone.” In typical talk-listen pattern, he said, “He's here, but he's not feeling up to conversation. Can I give him a message? . . . Ned Salazar. I'm a friend. A close friend . . . Yes . . . What time tomorrow will you know something?”

There was more silence, then Ned looked at me and said to the phone, “She said that? . . . All right, I'll make sure he knows. Is there anything else I can tell him?” Evidently there wasn't. Ned rang off and came to sit beside me.

“He thinks something important fell through some crack or other. He's convinced this shouldn't have happened.”

My words barely squeaked out. “How did he know?”

“Your mother has been raising Cain. Both Metcalf—is it Doctor? —and the headmistress are now involved. They've told your mom that their report about you was beyond glowing, and there's sure as hell nothing wrong with your grades. I guess they've sent enough kids to Oxford in the past to know how this goes, and they don't think this has gone as it should. Dr. Metcalf will phone you tomorrow after they've had a chance to speak with someone at Oxford, and your mom has already told him she'll go in with you to meet with Metcalf and Healy, both.”

Suddenly there were tears. My head fell forwards onto my knees, and I sobbed. I sobbed until I couldn't breathe. If I could have spoken I might have said aloud the words that were screaming inside my head: “I'm sorry, Dad. I'm so sorry.”

Ned threw an arm around my shoulders and pulled me to him. At some point I couldn't hold onto my knees any longer. I fell against Ned and let him hold me until the sobbing quieted down.

When I could speak, I said, “I don't even know what I want anymore. Nothing has gone right. Nothing has gone as it should have gone. Nothing is what it's supposed to be.”

“So if you get a big, fat apology from Oxford, will you go?”

I almost laughed. “Even if they've committed the most egregious error, they won't apologise. They'll just say, ‘Ah, yes. Meant to offer you a spot. Terrible mix-up, what?' ”

He chuckled. I didn't. He got up, found a box of tissues and held it out towards me. “Want me to heat up your dinner?”

Blowing my nose, I shook my head. Ned laid a hand on my shoulder and more or less led me back to my chair. He handed me the fork again. I took it and made as good an effort as I could to eat. I got about halfway through everything and just couldn't manage any more. I set the fork down and looked at Ned.

“I don't know that I'd go now in any case.”

“I don't blame you. But let's find out what the problem is before you make a decision.” He lifted the tray out of the way.

On an impulse, I opened the folder on my computer where I keep Tink's pictures. I said, “This was my cat.” The fact that I had to use the past tense made my eyes tear up all over again, and my breath caught several times as I moved through the photos. Ned made a few appropriate comments, and when I'd gone through them all he pulled me to my feet and into a tight hug.

My voice breaking, I said, “Even if I go home I can't have her back. She's Margaret's cat now.”

He rocked me gently and said, “I know, sweetie. I know.”

There was a knock at the door. Ned went to answer it as I told him, “I don't want to talk to anyone.”

It was Mum. She told Ned, “I just want to make sure he's all right.”

And suddenly, there was the anger. But I didn't shout. My voice was icy. “I'm not all right. I don't know how I'll ever be all right again. It's all gone, now—truly, all gone. And you can stop pretending that you care what happens to me. I know you didn't want me.”

“Didn't want you! Oh, Simon, what on earth makes you say that?”

“You told me yourself. You said you hadn't wanted children, and you certainly didn't have any after me.”

“No. Oh, no, that's not the way it was, at all! I wanted children very much.”

“That's not what you said when you told me about Clive. I was an accident.”

“Simon, you were no accident! I had two miscarriages before you, and another one after. I didn't plan to have children
before
I met your father. And that was because of Clive.” She stepped farther into the room, towards me. “Simon, darling, how long have you been thinking these things?”

“I—I never knew. About the miscarriages.”

“One doesn't like to talk about them. They're horribly painful, and I felt I'd failed your father. Simon, you were wanted. Desperately wanted. You still are.”

It's difficult to articulate what I felt at that moment. Approaching it like fine wine, there were notes of shock and then disbelief in the nose; the body was dense with complex layers of grief, pain, and something that was almost but not quite joy; and the finish was numbness and confusion and an unidentifiable sense of loss.

I spun around to face the opposite wall, not wanting her to see what was happening on my face, determined not to reveal specific emotions until I'd had time to process this news. I felt rather than heard her approach me. “Don't,” I said to forestall the embrace I knew she would offer. “Leave me alone. Go away.”

Her voice was soft, even tender. “I will go. But first I want you to know that I'll do everything in my power to correct this wait-list situation. There's been an error, Simon. It's the only explanation. I haven't talked to you about this, because I know you haven't forgiven me and mostly avoid talking to me, but I've met several times with Dr. Metcalf and twice with Dr. Healy. All along, all through your time at St. Boniface, they've been extremely impressed with you. They've seen the effort you've made, and they've seen the results. They've seen your creativity, your resourcefulness. And they were horrified when I called them with this news. Horrified, Simon. We're all throwing our full weight behind this. You deserve Oxford, if you want it.”

Without another word, she turned and left.

Ned squeezed my arm. “Anything I can get you? A glass of wine?”

I took a couple of shuddering breaths. “I'd like some brandy.”

“No shortage of that in this house. Shall I bring some up?”

A picture of myself sitting up here alone, drinking brandy, seemed too depressing. Maybe it was also that I felt Oxford had betrayed me, and possibly my home was here, now. Whatever the reason, I told Ned, “I'll go down. Aren't you here rather late? Shouldn't you be home with Manuel?”

He smiled. “I'm leaving shortly. Manuel knows what's going on, and he understands why I wanted to stay for a bit. He wants to meet you, by the way. We'll have to arrange it sometime soon. I'll put your drink order in downstairs.” He paused in the doorway, the folded tray under his arm. “You're gonna be fine, kid. I know it seems ugly right now, but you'll end up wherever you want to end up. Promise.”

I did go downstairs for a glass of brandy. Brian and I sat in the music room and listened to Gregorian chant.

BOOK: Educating Simon
4.99Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Black Seconds by Karin Fossum
A Little Christmas Jingle by Michele Dunaway
Gianni's Pride by Kim Lawrence
Venom by David Thompson
Hide & Seek by Aimee Laine


readsbookonline.com Copyright 2016 - 2024