
I was slumped up against several tons of luggage piled high in black military duffels like so many body bags testifying, the result of some great catastrophe. It was my second time to London in as many summers, and if I’d had known it would be my last for at least eight years I probably would have been out enjoying the experience. As it was, however, I had spent the lion’s share of my time in
There had been some discussion about how to pronounce Maryka’s name before she had made her way from comfortable suburban
A rangy, bow-legged kid from Anywhere, Georgia, Rosco was just Maryka’s type. “Howdy,” he drawled out impossibly long as he almost gracefully splayed his legs out in front of himself, dropped down next to Maryka and cocked his camouflage John Deer hat back on his head.
“Hey,” she responded, raising her eyebrows in a passable imitation of interest.
“What’s yer name?” he continued, seemingly unperturbed by the general lack of reciprocity so far in the conversation.
“My name?” she said, and I could feel her skating the razor’s edge. She chose grace. “My name’s Maryka. What’s yours?”
“Oh, I’m jus’ Rosco,” he said, scratching the back of his neck. “Muh r-eye kuh,” he strung each drawled syllable out to its extremity, a kid with their first piece of salt water taffy. “Say, Muh-reye-kuh . . . yer red hair sure is perty.” This just keeps getting better I thought to myself as Maryka swallowed a snigger in my direction. “It reminds me of that Anne of Green Gables girl, ya know?”
And then the three of us just sat there in awkward silence for what seemed like hours until Maryka got up and muttered something about how nice it was to make Rosco’s acquaintance and how she was sure they’d run into each other soon. Things continued on like that on our team for another three or four weeks; awkward approaches at flirting, coy ripostes and the gamut of stereotypical teenage intersexual transactions until something magical happened under the Mahajanga mango groves. For the first time in my life, for about six weeks, I stopped seeing people and started experiencing people. Mike and Simon and Tom became as beautiful to me as Bronwyn, Brandt and Debbie. There was no male, nor female. We were all Greeks and one another's slaves. It didn’t last for long, and it didn’t happen for everyone, but it happened for me and at 17 years of age it was a mystical experience to commune with the selves and not the personas.
1 comment:
The internet is an amazing thing... it is rather surreal to discover a blog which describes my 17-year-old self in detail. I'd like to think that I have changed over the last eight years, but according to your description, I'm very much the same. I remember that very incident with "rosco" very clearly. As I remember, I had to repeat my name three or four times, and he still didn't get it. So I ditched the yankee accent and threw in a little southern drawl: Muh-rye-kuh. Then it clicked for him. One thing I learned from that trip is you just have to speak to people from where they're at :o) It is good to hear from you, Micah. I will always remember you fondly as a close companion on that trip
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