Jackie Cushing was fighting it all the way, wearing knickers, him, twelve going on thirty it felt some days, dreams about Ginnie Grayson practically every night now, the morning dew being the vague remnants his father spoke about with a smile on his face, new hairs in his crotch, his mother wanting her boy to look neat, his father looking at the horizon almost saying aloud this too will pass. It was his one-shoulder shrug that carried verb and noun in its arsenal. Jackie had early discovered that his father did not need a lot of words.
His mother was looking at her choice of two hats, checking them out in the mirror on her bureau. A dried flower was creased in cellophane in one corner of the mirror; Jackie’d heard some reference about it but had declined interest. His father’s picture, him in a Marine uniform, was framed in a second corner, his sisters and him in another, in their Sunday best a year earlier. A palm frond from Palm Sunday twisted itself across the top of the mirror. He thought the hats were as old as he was. He knew she would pick the purple one. Her eyes announced the decision prematurely; again, an article of speech. Much of the time they were a family of silence, where looks or shrugs or hand gestures or finger pointing said all that was needed. His cousin Pauline had given the hat to her. “You’ll look great in this one.” He could never tell his mother that Pauline’s boyfriend had swiped it from a booth in Dougherty’s Pub in Malden Square where he’d go every now and then. Jackie’d seen them talking one evening on the porch, Dermott’s hand up under Pauline’s dress and it not yet dark.
A May Sunday was a bit snappy along with the sunrise. “There will be hundreds of people at Nahant Beach today,” his mother had confirmed. Both the radio in the bedroom and the kitchen were on; her music almost mute in the background. She looked out the window across Cliftondale Square, across the green of the traffic circle and the new green of elms already leaping at full growth against the sky. On the third floor they lived, yet not as high as some of the elms.
Gently a nod was spoken, an affirmation. “They are waiting for summer at the beach,” his mother added. “They go walking on the beach looking for it. It’s over the horizon a few weeks yet. We will go right from church. You will wear your new green suit.”
At length it had become her trip-hammer approach, the hard music. In that voice he felt the agencies of iron and slag at a mix. “You don’t know how proud I am of you in your new suit. And two pair of pants, at that.” For sure, iron and slag in her words, the new and the dross. At her lighting up about the new suit, Jackie cringed. Two pair of pants seemed eternal, would carry him into high school, into football, the mold of the locker-room, pal-talk growing the way his older brother would nod, owning up to all he had heard. Hell, there’d be knickers, for God’s sake, for girls, lots of them prettier than Ginnie Grayson who once sat across a log flashing her white underpants at him so that something happened in his throat, something so dark and dry and dreadful that he could taste it yet.
Simon Goldman it was who sprung the suit on his mother, little shrunken Simon with the poppy eyes and the red face, on Saturday morning collecting his due of pennies she yet owed on a parlor set.
“It’s green herringbone tweed, my Helen,” he said, in that possessive delivery he must have developed early in his game. “It has two pair of pants. For you yet cheaper than anyone. Resplendent he will be in it. Resplendent. No boy in this whole town has a suit like it. And the famous golfers wear knickers; I’ve seen them in newsreels at the theater. Hogan and O’Brien and Downey, McDevitt and Fitzpatrick, McHenry and that Shaun whoever from Swampscott.”
He was inventive, you had to admit. Jackie’d have said a liar as well as a schemer. “Two pair of pants. Green. Herringbone. Think of the message.”
Simon’s eyes almost fell out of his head, dropping Ireland almost at his feet, dropping it at her feet. Jackie almost pushed him down the stairs; Simon was at it again, selling her, saying it was a bargain, saying you people are climbing the social ladder on my advice and merchandise. Truth is, his mother cautioned him once, only once, on how he should remember Simon. “I found him,” she had said, “he didn’t find me.”
The worst part of it all, putting on the suit, the knickers with knee length socks, was having to take off his sneakers. He thought they were welded to him. He thought he’d wear them forever. He belonged in sneakers, foul or fair, “But not in your new suit.”
It was as if her whole foot had come down on the subject. His father lifted his chin, flicked his head aside, gave off a mere suggestion of a nod, and shrugged his shoulders. This too shall pass. With a knife he could not have carved it deeper.
In his new greenery they headed for Nahant Beach, him in his green knickers, four sisters all dolled up in the back seat of the old Graham, the titters and snickers behind their hands, his unsworn vow becoming animate at the back of his mind, a prowler on the outskirts of a campground.
Up front, in her purple hat, a purple dress with a big collar, a black pocketbook with an over-scored but lustrous patina, his mother looked straight ahead, playing now and then with the knob on the radio, trying to catch La Scala or New York out for a morning stroll.
She stared at nothing she might wish to have. Beside her, between her and his father in a car borrowed from an uncle, was the second pair of green herringbone knickers. Not knowing why they were there, Jackie nevertheless felt his father’s hand in it. He wondered if there had been an argument’s movement along with the package, or behind it. Arguments I had heard, about dozens of things, then quiet discussions.
Once it had been about the radio one could hardly hear. “Music has shaped me,” his mother once said, “from the very first touch to the very first clench of fist.” That’s when he knew she loved the brass of a band or an orchestra, not just the oompa of it, but the cold clear energy of horns clearing their throats with melodies one could only dream of.
“Toot the horn,” his mother said. “Now there’s Dolly Donovan.” Her wave was thorough and friendly. No message hung on its signal. “She’ll be at the beach. Maurice will bring her.” Jackie did not deflect a message in that pronouncement: it came anyway. Maurice bid and Maurice done. Some laws, it seemed to say, were carved in stone. It could have said Life is more than being made to wear green knickers, but he wouldn’t let it.
In the rearview mirror he caught his father’s eye. “We might as well see what Forty Steps looks like today, and then come back to the beach.” The gears downshifted as he swung the corner down Boston Street in Lynn. They had come over the bridge spanning the Saugus River. In Jackie’s nose the salt was alive, and pictures came with it. The gulls, by the hundreds, whipped up a frenzy. Waves dashed on the rocks of Nahant, especially where Forty Steps climbed upward from the froth of water. The lobster boats, working yet, bobbed out on the Atlantic. Under sunlight majestic white sails of sloops and schooners and sailboats from Elysium, Islands of the Blessed and Marblehead darted like skaters before the wind. On that same wind brigantines and caravels and corsairs leaped from his reading, taking him away from green knickers and Nahant all the way back to Elysium and Ginnie Grayson, the salt spray clean and sprightly and the dry vulture of taste yet in his throat from one glimpse of white underpants. Would that mystery, that sight, never go away?
The Graham, brush-painted green, lumpy for the tour of Nahant where Cabots and Rockefellers and Lowells and Longfellow himself once sat their thrones, cruised along the Nahant Causeway. In the slight breeze you could feel the sun bleaching stones, sand, and the inner harbor’s glistening rocks throwing off plates of light like the backs of hippopotami caught in a satin lacquer. People dressed for church and late dinners and nights on the town walked along the beach, their best clothes akin to badges of some sort.
“My, look at that white hat with the huge brim,” his mother said, pointing out a woman holding a man’s arm, three children at their heels. The girls were still giggling behind their hands, restrained while his father was driving, on their best behavior. Once on the beach they would become themselves. And he would set about de-suiting himself.
When they strolled over to the Forty Steps, the waves talking to them, the crowd of people on all approaches, he saw other boys in knickers, but no herringbone green tweed. No iron mother holding her whip and her pride in one hand. A few giggles and harrumps he heard, the way his grandfather could talk, making a point or two on his own. No question in his mind the harrumps were directed at his pants more than the whole suit. These people could also nod, shrug, gesture, and make sense without words. He wondered what made him want to read in the first place, seeking all the adventure of new words, in this wide world of the body’s semaphore, so expressive, so legitimate.
He knew it wouldn’t take long, not at Nahant, not at the edge of the great ocean itself, not here where the Norsemen and Vikings and Irish sailors were flung across the seas with Europe behind shoving them relentlessly. His parents, arm in arm, walked on pavement, the girls broke free with yells, I\and he fled down to the rocks at the ocean’s edge. With an odd gesture, his mother lifted a hand to her face, as if surprise dwelt there to be touched, to be awakened, to be lifted for use. That’s when he knew she was the smartest person in the whole world. She had seen it all coming, had practically choreographed the whole thing, and his father thinking he was in control all that time. At last she had measured him against all other boys in knickers. And found something wanting.
Green is as green does, he could almost hear himself say as he slipped on the rocks heavy with seaweed still with salt, still with water, still with an unbecoming dye residing pimple-like, blister-like, pod-like, in its hairy masses. It was more like sitting down in a puddle of ink, that intentional trip, trying to be a loving son, finding it so difficult in green knickers, obeying more primal urges.
“What a mess you’ve made of yourself,” his mother said when she saw him, that hand still in surprise at her face. “Go up to the car and change your pants. I brought the other pair along,” so you could get rid of them also, she seemed to say.
His father, meanwhile, had found the horizon to his liking, the thin line of boyhood and manhood merging out there on the edge of the world; no shrug of the shoulder, no sleight of hand, but a look outward that was as well a look backward.
Jackie saw it all. I’m so damned lucky, he said to himself, loving them forever, and then some.
Banner Image: By Tomwsulcer (Own work) [CC0], via Wikimedia Commons
Simply beautiful! A story to remember. Best wishes, June
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Hi Tom,
I normally champion how lyrical and well written your stories are. This is no exception except you gave me the ‘heebs’ thinking about wearing Tweed!!! (As well as wool and turtle-necks, this brings me out in an itchy sweat!!)
Excellent as usual my friend.
Hugh
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