Date: Sat, 09 Aug 2003 07:50:14 -0700
From: Robert B <robert_b9968 (at) hotmail.com>
Subject: Hiding in McClintock High 2

AUTHOR'S NOTE:  Something may have been misunderstood in my last note, even
by the Archivist, so I'll start with that.  While I mentioned some of the
characters in the first chapter are very loosely based off a couple real
people, all the names are as fictional as the personalities.  Most names I
borrowed from a newspaper or the phonebook, or anything else close at hand
that had an appropriate-sounding name in it.  Basically, what I meant was
that I had occasionally recalled a couple memories and then used my creative
side to shake them up.  There's some people in the memories but, unlike the
physical places, they were totally altered by my imagination.  Does that
make sense?  I'm not sure. To break it down:  don't go looking for these
people in real life, because they don't live there. :-)


Anyway, to get far away from that tangent....Chapter two came along much
faster than I expected, and somewhat shorter.  It just felt right to end it
when I did.  I'll try to get the next chapter out within a week or so, but
it could easily be shorter or longer.


I also want to thank everybody who wrote and gave me encouragement from the
first chapter.  I was seriously considering whether or not I should just
request that the story be deleted, but I suppose I'll keep at it for a bit
longer.  To reach me for comments (either positive or constructively
negative, I do read both) my e-mail address is still


robert_b9968   hotmail.com  (@ removed for spam-protection purposes, add it
in to e-mail me.  Many thanks to the archivist who noticed this last time.)


Chapter II
==========


	I began to leave the room, but on the way something slipped underfoot.
After regaining my balance, I quickly scanned the floor for what had almost
tripped me.  I immediately noticed an old bone-handled hunting knife, with a
slightly curved blade measuring more than five inches long.  It was durable
enough to be stepped on -- I had done much worse to it, over the years - but
the safely folded blade was sharpened to a razor's edge   Much wiser to keep
it with me than to step on it again, I thought, so I put it into my pocket
and idly tried to decide where to leave it later tonight.


	Dinner, both the food and the atmosphere, was boring and uneventful.  Dad
rambled on incessantly about his latest woes at his work and Mom complained
about various problems around the house -- she did have a job too, but the
house problems apparently took priority.  This annoyed my father greatly, as
she held him responsible for every dripping faucet or squeaking hinge.  If
the roof was suddenly blown into the backyard, I mused, she would probably
send him outside with a hammer and not let him back in until he had fixed
it.


	I said little throughout the meal, and only picked at the dry meatloaf.  I
was busy scrambling for the words that would have to come soon.  I hadn't
slept the entire night before, trying to decide what I would say, but I was
still at a complete loss.  The food was finished, the table cleared, and I
began on the dishes.  'What should I say?  What should I say?'  My mind
chanted.  The clean dishes were put away, and the dirty ones were in the
dishwasher.  Now dinner was over.  It was time.  I'd just have to improvise.


	I walked into the family room, where my mother and father sat on the couch
watching CNN.  I pulled up a folding computer chair and straddled it,
resting my arms on the seatback.  I was facing them, but I looked away as I
mumbled, "Um, mom, dad, can I talk to you about something important?"


	"Of course, sweetie."  My mother chimed as she shut off the television.  My
father, miraculously not hidden behind a wall of paperwork, seemed generally
more affable now after his third glass of scotch.  They both looked at me,
unknowingly waiting for the bomb to drop, and appeared totally supportive
and caring.  These were my parents; I knew they loved me.  They had to
understand.  My heart was beating dangerously fast, and my head swam
somewhat from it, but I had to go through with it.  'Enough of the lies.'  I
thought resignedly, 'Time for it all to end.'


	I breathed in deeply, and as I let the air forcefully come back out the
words sailed along with it.  "I'm sorry that I'm not a better son.  I'm
sorry for lying to you all these years, and most of all, I'm sorry for never
being able to be who you want me to be.  I...."  Suddenly it felt like my
brain had forcefully closed my throat in a last ditch effort for silence,
but I broke through and said the words that can never be taken back.  "I'm
gay."


	For half a minute, there was silence.  I wanted to look at the floor, but I
was compelled to watch my parents' faces as they took in what I had just
said.  Their thoughts were obvious as they slowly realized I wasn't joking
and tried to decide just how they felt.  Finally, my mother seemed to reach
an idea that comforted her, and nervously forced a motherly laugh.


	"Oh, honey, it's just a phase you're going through.  You'll grow out of
it,"  she cooed.


	"No, mom, it's more than that.  If it were just a phase, I would have grown
out of it a long time ago."


	"Bullshit!"  My father finally erupted.  "No son of mine is gay.  They say
being that way is genetic, and no way in hell did you get that from me.
What do you want my colleagues to think?  That I'm some kind of pansy just
because my son is?  You get over this, right now!"


	"I can't just get over it, dad.  It's more than just making a choice.  Like
you say, it's genetic, it's in my blood.  It would be easier for me to
rewrite the dictionary with my left hand!"


	"Now, honey,"  My mom interrupted, on the verge of sounding panicky,  "You
can go to a special kind of therapist.  I just read about them in the
newspaper the other day.  It's difficult, but if you try hard enough, they
promise they can make you normal again."


	"Normal?"  I repeated,  quickly becoming angry.  In the back of my mind, I
noticed that anger made this type of thing much easier for me.  "Who the
hell is some shrink to say what's normal or not?  You want me to go and bury
who I am, and deny the nature that made me that way, just so I can blend in.
  How is that being normal, exactly?"


	"Listen here," my father continued belligerently.  "I will not allow this
sort of behavior in my house.  You will go to this therapy -- which I
suppose we'll have to pay for -- and you'll forget that you ever wanted to
be this way.  Your mother and I love you, son, and we always will, but we
will not condone our only son being a faggot!"


	The last word felt like a punch in the stomach, and a curtain of silence
suddenly draped over the conversation.  I gradually stood from the chair and
faced them, blinking back hot tears.  I would be stronger than that; I would
not be so weak as to cry in front of my father, on top of everything else.


	"I don't expect your approval, or even your understanding.  That might come
in time, or it might not.  All I want is for you to see me as who I really
am.  The person in front of you is your son, not the boy of lies I've been
parading around for all these years.  If you can't accept that, maybe I
should just leave."


	"Maybe you should," my father said coldly.  I stared at him and my jaw
dropped slightly, nothing compared to the wide-eyed shock my mother was
giving us both.  "We do love you, son.  I meant that.  But unless you
realize what's best, I think you might be better off on your own."


	"George, you can't mean that."  My mother moaned desperately.  "Give him
another chance.  I'm sure --"


	"Hold on, Darlene!"  My father barked, silencing my mother as surely as
covering her mouth would have.  "So what's it going to be, Jason?  Will you
stay here with your parents, and try to change your ways?  If not, you do
know where the door is."  His eyes held a smug satisfaction as he said this.
  He knew he had won the argument.


	For nearly a solid minute, nobody spoke.  I stood still, looking around my
home, taking in all the memories from younger days.  Few pleasant memories
came to mind.  I stared at my parents, letting their image be pressed into
my mind.  I don't know who was the most surprised by what finally came next.


	"Goodbye," I said softly, and started for the door.  A single tear worked
its way down my cheek, but my back was to my father, so I allowed it.


	"Jason!"  My parents called after me -- my mother in a panic, my father
enraged.  But it was too late.  I opened the door, shut it gently behind me,
and ran.