Date: Fri, 15 Jun 2001 15:41:50 -0700 (PDT)
From: Wishus Teglin
Subject: "Stupid Johnny" Prologue and chapter one (m/b)

Stupid Johnny
A Boylove Romance
by Teglin

Prologue and Chapter One


Dedication:

Once upon a time, a friend of mine named Michael was driving
along a country road in his native Poland, and came upon a
ragamuffin of a little boy, dressed in tatters, struggling all alone
to push a cart much too big for him.  Looking miserable, hungry,
cold.

It was one of those moments - we all have them - moments we
look back on with such great regret.  Because Michael wanted to
stop.  He wanted to talk with the boy, see if he was ok, if he
could use some food, or perhaps a helping hand, or just a kind
word.  But he didn't stop.

Why didn't he stop?  Why don't we all stop, in moments like
that?  Why do we let convention, or fear, or doubt, or hurry, or
sometimes just plain selfishness keep us from meeting the
moment?

Well, Michael helped me write this story.  It's all about what
might have been.  It's dedicated to that little boy on the roadside.
And every other boy anywhere in the world who might someday
need one of us to stop ... just for him.



Copyright 2001 by Teglin.  You may freely copy this
boylove romance and distribute it.  Please have the courtesy
not to alter it in any way.


WARNING:

This boylove romance contains descriptions of sexual acts
between a man and a minor boy.  Their sexual relationship is
very important to the story, as part of their love-making, but
it is their spiritual relationship that I wanted to explore even
more, as the very essence of boylove.

If this story is illegal where you are, or for your age, or the
concept of a man/boy romantic relationship offends you,
don't read further.




Glossary:

For those of you who lack polish in Polish, here are a few of the
names and their phonetic spelling:

Jasio  =  Yasho
Piotr Ostoja  =  Pyoter Ostoya
Leon Koczurba  = Le-own Kotschurba
Beskidy = Beskeedy
Jodlowka  = Yodlovka
Sosnowka  = Sosnovka
Rzeszow = Dgeshow
Polska = Powlska
Misiu = Meeshoo




Stupid Johnny

Prologue

Jodlowka State Farm Collective
Rzeszow Administrative District, Polska
September 14, 1959  4:52 PM

The gloom descended upon Jasio, becoming a part of him - like
the wet and cold of the day-long drizzle.  The light he had
struggled to keep forever burning within his soul, through every
moment of his eleven years on Earth, sputtered and dimmed.

His narrow shoulders slumped, his bruised chest dropping away
from the push bar of the cart, even as he quit pedaling.  For the
first time all day, he felt the rough edges of the torn cardboard
soles of his shoes, and the bite of the cold against the raw
bottoms of his feet.

The cart rolled slowly to a stop on the side of the road, in the
graveled turnout.

What was the point of going on?

He heard the splat of water droplets on the forest floor nearby.
Drip, drip ... drip.  Random markers, in the near perfect silence.
The wind had died down now.  Not even the tree limbs rustled -
no sign of life remained in his world, as the gloom lowered upon
him.

The smoke trails, rising from the line of farm houses on the
Collective, were lost in the  gray of the clouds.  They had
beckoned.  For a while.  Until the minutes and hours of his long
day ticked by, and finally he had totaled up his harvest.  He had
a cart half loaded with ... junk ... that's what everyone else would
call it.

But when he had found each piece, he had seen such potential!
Look at the curve of that bar of iron!  Two like that, and he could
build that stroller to walk the watering bucket along the rows of
....

He closed his eyes.  He hadn't found two like that.  And that bar
of iron was so much useless scrap, in the eyes of everyone in the
Collective.  `Glupi Jasio!' they'd say, if he knocked on their
doors.  `Stupid, stupid Jasio.  Get out of here!  It's not our turn.
You were here just last month.'

Another stab of pain in his empty stomach, and he sagged even
more.  He just wanted to double up on himself, and fall to the
ground and be done with it all!

"Ouuhhhhnnnnnnnhhhh," he groaned miserably, against the
twisting pain.  Two days since his last meal.  Two days since he
was kicked out of the Podlowski family's hut.  Two days of
searching, and a cart half full to show for it.  Half full of ... junk.

So they were right, weren't they?  It was junk, wasn't it ... no
good to anybody, much less him.  No matter what he saw in his
head.  Dreams, plans, designs ... none of that would put even a
bite of food in his stomach!  And this coat he was wearing,
dragging him down, soaked, heavy with the rain water ... heavier
still with more ... junk!

He knew he should just take the coat off.  Maybe then he'd have
the strength to pedal some more.  Just a little farther to the
intersection, and he could ride downhill just a bit to the
collective.

Wearily he lifted his head, straightening his backbone.  Not even
looking down at it he reached with his right hand to start pulling
off the sleeve of the coat from his left arm ... then he sighed, and
closed his eyes.  He just couldn't do it.  The very idea was like ...
giving in.  In that coat was everything he owned!  Everything that
marked who he was.  The winter was a blessing in one way - it
allowed him to wear that coat, blanketing himself with his very
possessions.  To lose that, to lose even one of them, was
unthinkable!

But ...

... but ... giving in ... hadn't he reached that point now?

His shoulders slumped again, but he stayed upright. His head
lolled back, and his right hand slid off his leg, and dropped to
the steering lever for the rudder wheel.  He held his arm stiffly
there, propping his small frame up, teetering, wobbling, just
wishing that he could make his mind totally blank.

If only ... if only he could just ... die.  Right here.  Now.

Jasio just sat there, unmoving, minute by minute, feeling the wet
cold penetrating into his body - creeping up his arms and legs -
almost wishing it in, deeper and deeper, wanting to feel the same
numbness within his very soul that he felt all day in his hands
and feet.

`... rrrrrrrrrnnnnnnnnnn ...,' he  heard a sound breaking into the
deathly pall of the settling gloom.

He did not want to register it.  He steeled himself, refusing to
even turn his head towards it - a car coming, gears shifting
higher.  Must have just turned the last corner, he knew, without
even considering it.  Instantly - against his will - his mind shifted
into high gear too, and he marveled at the concept - if only he
could make a motor like that!  This one was one of those big
government cars too, one of those powerful Russian ... imagine if
he had a motor, even a small one, on his cart!

`Stop it!' he screamed to himself inwardly.

`I'll never be able to build a motor!  I'm Glupi Jasio, remember?!
Better I end it all right now, right here, than to ever build
anything again!

Suddenly the driver switched on his headlights, and Jasio almost
felt the glare from them hit him broadside.  He welcomed the
bright, glaring beam.  `Take a good look, whoever you are.  No
one else ever did!  Look at me, before you kill me.  Then drive
on, and forget all about it!'  Slowly he turned his head towards
the car, almost defying the seconds to tick by, letting it get closer
and closer.  He stared at the big black vehicle, it's broad, silver-
chromed grill looking like the teeth of some huge monster.

When the gaping maw of the beast was almost upon him, he
pushed the steering bar hard to the outside, then leaned all his
weight into the downstroke on the left pedal.  The car was
almost on him now.  All he had to do was get back on the road,
and ....




Chapter One

Droga Starego Krola (Old King's Road)
Rzeszow Administrative District, Poland
September 14, 1959  4:53 PM


Tomek always said I cried too much.   He also said I'd get into
trouble someday for caring too much.   Now suddenly, years
after I thought every emotion had been drained from me, I was
crying again.  And I was in very deep trouble.

Don't get me wrong.  Tomek said all that back when I was just a
kid, at the beginning of the War.  Almost twenty years ago.

He found me, a few days after the German tanks had made mince
of my family's farm.  I was crying the first time he ever saw me,
standing over the graves I had just dug with my 12 year old
hands.  Dirty, exhausted, hungry ... and now homeless.  One of
the first war orphans.

Tomek had lost his family too.  He didn't cry about it, though.
He decided to fight back.  Took me in, along with a lot of other
strays, and before you knew it, he had put together what was no
doubt the strangest resistance cell during the entire war.

Tomek's Boys.  Just him, one big bear of a man, and his boys.
With something to prove.  Mighty Tomek ... how he sheltered
me, and cared for me, taught me how to take revenge, and when
revenge was to be taken.  He took me into his bed eventually.  I
had told him all about me and Stefan.  I was a boy.  He gave
himself to me.  When I became a man all too soon, he showed
me how I could give ... to the little ones who in turn needed me.

I'd cry, softly, quietly, every time we made love.  Feeling his
strong arms about me ... remembering other arms that had often
held me just so ... then feeling his hard manhood deep within me
... I'd cry.  Tomek would laugh at me, just as softly, and say in
his gruff, bearlike voice, "It's only a fuck, Piotr, my God!  It's
only a fuck."  But then he'd hold me even tighter, his embrace
telling me even more clearly than words could ever do, that he
really did understand.

He'd stay inside me long after filling me with his seed - just
holding me.  Caressing me.  Gently fondling my penis, to bring
me down slowly from our coupling.  Then he'd kiss me on the
top of my head and say, "This war should have taught you one
thing, my little Piotrek.  Never care too much."   One time, after
saying that, I craned my head back, to see why he'd grown so
silent - and I saw that the mighty Tomek could cry too.

Well, it's been many long years since then.   I'm a big boy now.
Taller than the average man - at 1.9 meters.  I've lived through 6
years of war, and now 14 years in this worker's paradise called
post-war Poland.  Suffice it to say that I've seen enough killing
and hurt and just plain downright injustice and misery, that I
haven't cried much of late.

Until today.   It wasn't so much the shock.  It's not even my very
healthy fear of what the Russians will do to me if I get sent back
for `reindoctrination.'  Dammit, it's the ... finality of it all.  The
end.  Of everything ... everything I've ever known!

I hadn't even had time to pack, it all happened so fast.

Noontime yesterday, I get back to the office, from my latest
inspection - a tour of airfields - south, in the Beskidy
Mountains.  I file my report, then head home for the rest of the
day.  Home - my one room flat in a concrete high-rise.  You'd
think 14 years, and the rank of Chief Inspector of the Rzeszow
Committee would rate me a dacha.  I did have my own car.

Still dead to the world, at 6:00 AM this morning Pawel calls me.
I've known him for - how long?  He came late, in '45, to Tomek.
But then we were both plucked from the resistance, after the
War, and sent to the Central Committee School in Warsaw.
That's how long.  Well, it's 15 years later, 1959, in Poland - you
get a call like this and you get scared - even when the call comes
from your long-time jackoff-buddy (hey, neither of us were into
men, but when you know you'll never, ever have a boy in your
life again - well, Pawel knew how to smuggle in German porn
....).

"Don't say anything," he starts off.  Of course I recognized his
voice, immediately.

"Pawe ...," I started to answer, I guess too mind-numbed from
sleep to think clearly.  I should have recognized the edge to his
voice.

"Don't say anything, I said!  Just listen."  Pawel happens to
work in the Ministry of Internal Affairs.  So the adrenaline starts
to pump, right then.

"You have about 12 hours, maybe 24 at the most.  I don't know
how you're going to do it, or where you're going to go.   I don't
want to know.  You will not contact me again," he said very
mechanically, then there was a pause.  I heard him breathe
heavily into the phone, then suddenly a sigh, and finally he
resumed - that knife edge to his voice now gone.  "I don't know
what you did, Piotr.  It's the KGB.  As of 4:43 AM this morning,
you're on their list."  Another pause.  I wanted to answer, and
tell him that I had no idea what he was talking about!  I knew he
was serious, though.  If I said anything, I'd probably put him in
danger.  Then the words that very clearly told me I would never
see or hear from Pawel again:  "Remember ... Tomek!"

Now 8 long hours later, most of that on this god-forsaken
winding country road, and I had had lots of time to remember
Tomek, and everything else about this just as god-forsaken
country.

Wiping the slow-falling tears away, to clear my vision, I kept my
big Russian GAZ-13 sedan going on up the narrow, wet road,
climbing imperceptibly into the foothills of the Carpathians.

This was still farming country - each Collective centered upon
one of the old peasant villages - the road followed centuries-old
field perimeters, turning and twisting seemingly without pattern.
The meanders of the road were like the wandering thoughts in
my mind, one reminiscence leading to another, and all day I had
been wavering - I knew I had to leave all this behind, yet ... how
could I?  Those furrowed rows, on each side of this road, were
the very soil I was born to!

Polska.  Poland.   Doormat to East and West.  How could
anyone love such a land?   Trouble was, my tears weren't for the
land.  Memories aren't made up of mere dirt.  If they were, then I
could gladly fly out to Sweden ... France ... America.  There
would be new memories to make there.

But dammit, I was leaving something behind here that was so
much more important than the land.  I was leaving behind ...
something uniquely Polish ... and every hope ... every dream I
had ever had ... I just might be leaving behind my very capacity
to ... to have any kind of meaning in my life at all.  What the hell
are any of us on Earth for?  Just to survive?  Just to reproduce?
Ha!  Little enough possibility of that in my case, as it was.  Plain
fact is, men have to be more than just rutting animals.  There has
to be some meaning to our lives.

Was it something uniquely Polish, that robbed me of all that
meaning?   Or was it just ... reality?

The very drizzle that turned the fields beside this road to mud,
every droplet swept off the windshield - those were like my own
tears - the essence of Poland ... they had poured from me before.
Many times.

... September, 1939 ... when I lost my entire family.  I don't think
about any of my family much anymore.  Too painful, even after
all the years.   There is one hurt that I do go back to though, from
those days.  A hurt that always brings with it the kind of
memories that you just don't run away from - even with the
Russians on your tail.

Before Tomek, I had Stefan.  Stefan was the reason I so needed
for Tomek to love me.  My boyhood friend.  How we played and
played together, inseparable, through fields, streams, snow or ice
... year after year, growing up together.

Then that last summer, we discovered our bodies.  I guess that
came first.   Then, somehow, we discovered ... the feelings.  The
feelings when you have another boy's arms around you, and
realizing that you are different.  That this is not some passing
moment.  That being with a boy, that being with THIS boy, is
inherently a part of your core.   The exhilaration - not just the
pleasure - when you feel another boy grinding his hard dick
against your own, realizing that it's right for him too, and that
this is something only another boy could give you.  That he's
giving you his consent, that he's asking you to be a part of him,
that you were born with this need that only he can fulfil.  The
feeling of another boy's soft lips against your own ....

Can 12 year old boys be lovers?

I still grow faint, remembering the almost over-powering perfume
of Stefan's warm breath ... we used to lay entangled in embrace,
touching each other, holding each other, from head to toes ... this
kid that I had played with practically every day of my childhood
- he had suddenly become ... precious to me.  I don't know how
else to describe it - he had suddenly become a ... a boy!   And for
some magical reason, oh my god, we suddenly knew what it
meant to be boys!

We'd go up in his family's old hay loft.   His father found us
there one afternoon.  Found us kissing so deeply that we didn't
even hear him climbing the ladder to the loft.  When we did see
him, we both thought it would be the end, but ... Stefan's old
man just gave us both a long look, staring us right in our eyes,
then he kind of nodded his head once, and silently backed down
the ladder.

So we had that one summer.  1939.  Two boys alone in our
perfect world.

We proved everyone wrong, that summer.  It didn't matter that
Stefan was a Jew, and I was not.  It didn't matter that we were
still just boys, in every sense of the word.  It didn't matter that
boys ... males ... weren't supposed to love each other, or even
know what true love could mean.  Or that we were supposed to
be too young to know what commitment meant.  Twenty years.
My heart still sings for thee, Stefan.   A mourning song.

I lost Stefan.  His farm was in the path of the German tanks too
... and then Tomek found me.  Tomek and his little band of boys
... oh! How we did show those Germans that the Polish people
would not forever and always bend down, to be booted and
spurred!

I remember the heady days after the War ... Liberte, Egalite -
Russian style.    Indoctrination in the party school.  Years
serving in the Division of Inspections - trouble was, if one
inspects too closely, one discovers the truth of liberty and
equality, Russian style.

I balled my fist and chopped it down onto the dashboard
viciously, wanting to strike out at something.  Anything!

Now, fourteen years after the War, I was a shell of a man.  Soul-
less.  Hardly the same person that Tomek once loved.  Six years
of fighting.  Fifteen years serving a corrupt regime and a
tarnished ideal.  Add those up, and you have a man who ... well,
he might still care, but he's lost something.  Some capacity to
believe in the efficacy of caring.

I brushed the sleeve of my overcoat across my eyes again.  And
shook my head ... trying to forget.

"Think about something else, dammit,"  I cursed outloud.  There
was a steely edge to my voice, kind of like the reverberation
whining up from the car's engine.

I pushed the heater control lever hard to the right.  It was getting
cold.  The trees lining the road in places - tunneling it - cast a
dark pall upon the evening, chilling me as much in spirit as in
body.   They masked the fields that more often pushed right up
against the berm.  It was slow going in places, on the too-narrow
road.  Just staying out of the mud on either side was a chore, but
better this than being spotted on the highway.

I really needed to be more attentive, to try to get everything I
could out of the car's big 8 cylinder engine, because I had to
climb deep into the Beskidy Range before moonrise tonight.  I'd
need that full moon to navigate when I finally took to the air, but
I wanted it pitch black when I reached the small airstrip just
outside of Sosnowka.  They were after me, because of what I had
seen at that airstrip.  I was sure of it now, after all day thinking
about it.  And I was sure that it was my only way out of this.

Dammit, why did I have to file that report!  I should have just
shoved the facts under the table. I should have recognized the
signs, and left this one alone.

But when did I ever just leave things alone?  Yeah.  Because I
cared too much?  Even after 14 years working in this corrupt
system, I still cared enough to want to correct the problems.  As
if they could be corrected!

Tomek told me that himself, right before I boarded the train for
Warsaw, back in '45.  "Piotr, promise me something."  He said,
sounding very solemn all of a sudden.

I was having none of that.  This was all so exciting for me.
"What's that, Papa?"  I answered off-handedly, not even
bothering to stop twisting my head about, taking in all the bustle
of the station.

"Promise me, that ... when the night is darkest, when all is lost,
promise me that you will fight through to the sunrise."

"What ... whatEVER are you talking about, old man," I
answered, fixing him with my gaze, my brow raised in
consternation and disbelief.   He had never spoken to me like
that.  I doubt if he had ever strung together so many words
before.

"Ahhh!" he grunted, looking disgusted.  He narrowed his eyes,
giving me one of those fierce stares that would have withered me,
shivered me to my boots, in the old days.  "Promise me you'll ...
never give up." he almost yelled it at me, forcing it out.  He
sounded like his throat had suddenly choked up on him.

"I promise!"  I answered immediately, feeling the old respect and
awe returning.  How could I ever have let myself forget!   "But ...
but why on Earth would you say this to me now, Tomek?"

He reached out then, his huge bear-paw hands lifting up so
lightening fast, enveloping my shoulders in his grasp.  He shook
me, once, powerfully.  Then pulled me to him, hugging me,
crushing me.  I was 18 now, already my full height, yet I felt like
I was 12 again.   I felt his lips crushing into my hair, above my
forehead - I couldn't even move in his grasp.  He towered over
me.

"Ahhh," he muttered, softer now, so only I could hear.  "Because
you care too much, my little Piotrek.  Don't let them hurt you,
little one.  Don't ever give up."

I wiped my sleeve across my nose, and eyes again, and realized
suddenly that ... I simply had no more tears.  I felt so very, very
weary.  Perhaps this time I'd have to give up.  Perhaps after 14
years, it was time to give up.  There was very little in my life to
hold onto anymore, anyway.  Most apparatchiks cave in,
eventually, losing all sense of honor and mission.  They just
draw into themselves, focus on their families, on simple survival.
But I had no family.  No one.  Nothing.

The road, the trees, the stubble in the fields - all became a blur -
eight hours on the road, with not a moment free of the of
thinking about all those memories and regrets and threats, and I
guess I simply no longer wanted any part of my reality.  I didn't
want any more thought of promises, either.

I just wanted to rest.

There was a gray ... something ... up ahead.   A boulder beside
the road, just where it curved again, up ahead.  A ... shack ...
something looming up out of the universal grayness of
everything else.  How convenient.  That was one way to rest. To
end all this.  All I had to do was ... just relax ... free the steering
wheel ... let my foot give into the heaviness that I felt drawing me
down into the seat, and ... it would all end there, in that gray
something up ahead.  All this would be over, just that easily.

With a kind of detached wonder in my mind, I contemplated the
shortening distance between my car and the object up ahead.
This thought of suicide - such a foreign concept to me, and it
had really just popped into my head.  Never before had such a
thing even crossed my mind.  Not after losing Stefan.  Nor my
own family.  Not even in those darkest days, before Tomek
found me.  Yet here I was on a road I had never traveled before,
nearing a destiny that I had never before even considered as
possible.  This was insanity!  This wasn't me!  I had to bear
down now!  Get on up the road!

Why of all things, barreling up that road, practically aiming now
for that gray barrier, did I bother to switch the headlights on?
Force of habit?  It was growing darker and darker by the minute,
as the uniform dull grayness of the clouds gave way to the darker
gloom of dusk.

Whatever the reason, as soon as my fingers closed around the
light knob, and twisted it full to the right, the non-descript
boulder up ahead transformed into a phantasmagoric structure, in
the spreading beam of light.  Two large wheels, and a wagon-like
flat-bed structure situated between them!  A mutated wagon,
with half a bicycle sticking out in front of it - or ... behind it?!  I
couldn't tell which, because upon that ...bicycle contraption,
facing ... the wrong way, it seemed ... was a bulky, but small
figure - a child ... long dark hair reaching below ... his ears,
almost completely masking the ghostly pale flesh of his ... her ...
face.

Instantly, the despair that had clutched so tightly around my
soul, and the rather cold, antiseptic detached contemplation of
my own death, was replaced by a very real horror - I was hurtling
down the road, my foot heavy on the gas pedal, aimed right at a
... boy!  It was certain that he was not going to move out of the
way.  Even as I recognized him for what he was, I saw him, as if
in slow motion, turn to look at me.  At my car.  I swear he
seemed to stare at me - not with the same kind of horror that I
felt, but with almost an ... acceptance.


-------------------------------------


September 14, 1959  4:55 PM

Jamming on the brakes was probably the worst thing I could do,
since the road was so slick, but that's exactly what I did.  The
tires screeched and the rear-end of the sedan started to swerve to
the right, in the very direction of the boy and his ... wagon.  At
the last moment, I had the sense to release the brakes, and press
down on the gas pedal.  I didn't gun it all the way to the floor,
but I did overreact a bit, pressing too hard too quickly, and the
tire's wailed out once more, slipping before biting into the
macadam and gravel of the road.  I heard a high-pitched scream
from the boy, and at the same time a disconsonate clash of the
heavy metal of my car against the wire-framed and lighter metal
of his wagon.

That scream knifed into me.  I felt my heart pounding - literally
pounding - in my chest, as I practically wrenched the steering
wheel out, I gripped it so hard.  In my head, I heard that scream
again and again, replaying - I couldn't believe that I had actually
hit, perhaps killed, a little boy!!  Man, woman, or child - it
would be horrible enough - but a boy!  By Stalin's Evil,
Demonic Ghost, me above all people - to hurt a boy!  I had ...
desperately longed ... for just one boy ... in my life ... for years!
Images of the boy's fragile little body, mangled or crushed,
flashed red through my mind.  I saw his big eyes staring up at
me, questioning, begging for an answer - why had I done this!

I don't know how long I sat there behind the wheel.  All I know
is that when I finally had a clear thought, and knew what I had to
do, I felt a streak of throbbing pain across my forehead.  At some
point during all that, I had slammed my head against the steering
wheel.

Slowly at first, I lifted my head from the backrest, and started to
shake it.  Big mistake!  The pain shot down, like a sword
stabbing down from my forehead all the way through to my neck.
I reached up tentatively, and felt my forehead, then turned my
hand palm up before my eyes, and examined it.  No blood.  I was
alright, then.

Moving as quickly as I could, I opened the door, and swung out.
I had to steady myself momentarily against the door frame, but
then quickly I plodded heavily, down the length of the car,
straining to search for the boy, all the while dreading that I
would find him sprawled lifeless in a pool of blood.

The wagon-like contraption was there, just at the right rear of the
car, standing on all three of it's wheels, looking little the worse
for the crash.  Was it possible I had only hit it a glancing blow?
But no boy!

Gathering my wits about me finally, and the use of my feet, I
quickly swept the entire area around the car and the cart, even
looking under the chassis of the car.  He wasn't there.  There was
no sign of blood.  Nothing.

"Where the ...," I started to exclaim, as I started scanning farther
out, and into the trees lining the road, and this little graveled
turnout where the boy had been sitting with his cart.

I saw him immediately.  Crouched behind a large bush, it's
leaves not yet completely turned the fiery red and gold before
falling, stripping the shrub down to it's bare branches. Even
shrouded in the gloom of late evening I saw his pale white visage
peeking through the foliage at me, as he held his body all
scrunched up in hiding.

For some reason, I turned away, as casually and naturally as I
could, acting like I hadn't seen him.
The bush was little enough to hide behind, but the boy obviously
felt the need of it's flimsy protection.  Something told me that I
needed to honor that.  I had come crashing into his world,
threatening to end his very existence, and there was certainly no
reason for him to trust me. I just thanked the god of boys, that he
apparently wasn't seriously hurt.  I let myself begin to breathe
much more easily then, feeling my heart start to calm down too.

"I ... wonder where he ... is," I said out loud, trying to project my
words out, to make sure that he would hear me.  "I hope I didn't
hurt him.  Oh please, don't let him be hurt."

For a moment I continued my mock scan of the trees.  My gaze
trailed idly over the cart, and stopped, instantly.  It was ... it was
... an amazing contrivance!  Certainly not the ordinary peasant's
pushcart - I had seen hundreds of them through the years, on my
inspection tours through the countryside.

Now I inspected the boy's contraption, steadying myself as I
knelt down on one knee to see under it.  It was a rubber band
and baling wire rigging.  Something put together by unskilled
hands, but ... somehow ... showing great ingenuity.  Beyond that!
True inventiveness.  A true understanding of ... first principles of
....

The power axle and gear of the bicycle, on the rear of the wagon,
had an extension wheel attached to it - on the hub - a grooved
wheel, kind of like you'd find on an old pull-start single-piston
gas motor.  The boy ... or whoever had rigged it ... had fixed this
wheel on the gear axle.  A long, flexible, canvas-like ... looped
cord ... flat-edged, fitting right into the wide groove of that
wheel, extended up under the wagon to another, larger wheel -
this one of hard rubber, on an independent axle, up under the
wagonbed.  You could see that it had been grooved too - a
channel dug into it, all the way around, to take the cord.  Odd
enough, to that point, but ... the inventor of this man-powered ...
or boy-powered ... conveyance contrived to make it two-wheel
drive!  With gear wheels on both ends of that independent axle,
attached with two more bicycle chains to gears on the oversized
cart wheels.

Now I was no physicist.   I had no clue about gears and power
ratios.  It just looked like whoever put this rigging together did,
though.  It looked like ... just the thing to allow a little boy to
power the huge cart, and it's heavy load, far beyond his normal
capacity.  I stood behind the frame of the cart bed, and pushed.
It was indeed heavy.  I doubted I'd be able to push it, by hand,
for long.

"Who did this," I started to mumble to myself, wondering at the
ingenuity ... the mechanical ... genius that was hidden away here
on this collective farm.  What if the boy had done it!?   For some
reason I wanted him to know - I wanted him to hear, in my voice,
that I admired his creation!  For some reason it was suddenly
important that I make him know!  My god, I had almost killed
him!   Perhaps I had indeed injured him.  And he had perhaps ...
created this?!

I felt my heart literally flutter, an unease, a weakness taking hold
over me - the realization hit me again - I had almost killed a boy!
More than a boy - I had almost killed this spirit - the spirit that
had produced this ... from mere scrap!

"Oh my God!" I called out loudly, looking straight at the cart,
but hoping against hope that the boy would hear me, and come
out from his hiding place, and let me see him.  Let me be assured
that he was ok.  Let me be assured that I had not robbed the
world of his wonderful mind.  "It's a ... masterwork.  This cart.
This took real engineering skill, to even conceive of this gear
reduction.  I wish I could ... meet ... the man who designed this."

Behind me I heard a sharp, high ... yelp ... from the boy's
direction.  It made me almost jump out of my shoes, but I didn't
turn.  He had started to yell out something, but squelched it.  Let
him bide his time.

Not to even glance his way was harder than I thought, but I
forced myself to concentrate on the cart, walking around it,
touching it, testing the rigging.  I put my foot on the pedal, to
feel what kind of power it would take to force this wagon along.
It lurched forward fairly easily, with just a tiny little screech of
an axle needing some lubrication.

Even as the cart protested my move, with it's almost human
squeal, from behind me I heard another protesting ... shout. More
a long drawn out scream, and then the rasping of what had to be
the boy's shoes on the loose gravel of the turnout.


----------------------


September 14, 1959  5:01 PM


Jasio sometimes watched the yard dogs chasing field mice and
rabbits.  The mice would head straight for the burrows, and the
boy could tell in an instant if the dog had an angle on its quarry.
With the rabbits though, it was harder - they would dart about,
change directions - their angles were never flat - and it was
harder to guess - he had to see the curve, predict the rabbit's
tangent, before he could tell if the rabbit was doomed or not.  He
always got it right, if he could sense where the rabbit was going
to pull out, into another straight run.

When he saw the terror in the driver's eyes, and heard the big
car's brakes squealing, he knew it was going to be a rabbit and
dog chase this time.  He knew instantly that his fate hinged on
how hard the man had slammed on his brakes, how fast the car
had been going, how heavily loaded the rear-end of the car was,
how ... oh! Sometimes he wanted to scream, because he could
see all these things, sense all these mysterious forces.  Most
times it thrilled him.  This time he simply didn't care.

The rear of the car was swinging around, it's back tires locked
rigid and burning against the rough surface of the road.  Their
screech seemed to knife into him physically, making his very
skin seem like it was crawling up his back!  It was all over, and
he knew it instantly, when the driver suddenly changed his
whole approach, and stepped on the gas.  He saw that the car
would only graze by the front edge of his cart, missing him
entirely.

He screamed out in anger and disgust, furious at himself that he
hadn't judged it right this time.  He hardly felt it, when the
sloping trunk of the car slipped right under the front overhang of
the wagonbed, lifting it up.  The cart's big wheels spun in
midair, but the whole front end of his cart just swiveled over on
the back steering wheel, and then bounced back onto the ground
as the car sped on forward.

`Glupi Jasio, can't even kill himself properly, the farmers would
say,'  Jasio thought disgustedly, as he stopped pedaling.  Mud
and gravel splattered up on him from the retreating wheels of the
car, then even that stopped, as the driver screeched to a stop.

Jasio could see it now. This was just going to make everything
worse for him  - as if it could get any worse!  Whoever was
driving this car was trouble.  That much was for sure.  Only
Party officials drove the big Russian cars.  Everyone in the
collective dreaded the visits, except maybe Leon.  But he was the
only man here who was a member of the Party.

The Party.  The Party.  Jasio could usually figure out what
people were talking about, but this thing called the Party was
still a mystery.  Whatever that was, everyone seemed to slink
around, when the Party men visited.  The men would always
curse, `bloody commie, up to no good.'  The women were more
practical - they would hide the food stores.

The boy quickly slid off the bike seat, and stooped behind the
wagon, stepping forward along it trying to peer into the car.
Through the rear window he saw the crown of the man's head,
just ... sitting there, leaning back in the seat.  Then it moved ...
slowly ... the man's hand came up ... and now he seemed to be
leaning into the door ....

Like a little field mouse, himself, Jasio darted back along the
wagon and headed straight for the thicket of trees and brush.  No
sooner had he slipped behind the first large bush that he could
reach, then he heard the car door slam shut.  He grasped a couple
of branches to steady himself, squatting on the balls of his feet,
and peered out into the dusk.

The man was tall!  Very tall.  Taller than anyone Jasio had ever
seen.  Like a giant from the stories that he used to hear the
farmer's wives telling the other kids.   He seemed to stagger
once, and to brace himself against the car.  In the gloom of the
evening, the man was just a dark blotch, melding with the black
mass of the car, but this blotch moved more steadily,
purposefully now, down along the car.  He looked to be
searching ... `probably checking to see if I damaged his car,' the
boy thought.

The Party man's deep voice barked out, "Where the ...!"  and
Jasio grasped the branches all the more tightly, wishing suddenly
that he had run farther into the trees, and kept on running.

"I wonder where he is,"  his giant's voice was louder now.
Deep, penetrating.   Jasio had often wondered how some voices
carried through the air and others seemed to always get
smothered and ignored.  His own small voice was so soft that
everyone seemed to ignore him.   But this Party man!  His voice
was ... somehow like ... like you had to listen to him, like ... like
Leon's ... like without effort he could make anyone hear him,
and they would want to hear him.

When Leon spoke, it was more often than not an angry curse, a
command that had to be obeyed ... or else ... or else he'd whip
you ... or else if you were one of the Collective members, you
might just lose your next allotment of seed, or ... the Party man
would be like that.  Jasio unconsciously leaned back on his feet,
preparing to leap back into the trees, if this big man started
looking for him. He felt the fear forcing bile up into his throat.

"I hope I didn't hurt him.  Oh please, don't let him be hurt,"  the
man's mellifluous voice called out, louder than it needed to be,
if he were just talking to himself.  Jasio didn't know what to
think now ... the man's voice sounded ... gentle somehow,
soothing ... yet that ... that had to be a trick!  `Fuckin Party,
always up to no good,' he could hear the men saying.  So ... this
was just the Party man's trick, to get him to come out.  Yet ... he
really sounded like ... he cared ....

The thought was like a hammer blow to his belly.  It hurt so bad,
suddenly, deep inside.  How many times in his life had he seen a
mother's soft caress, or a father's strong arm reaching out to
embrace ... or listened from his pallet in the corner, as
grandmama told all the other kids - the ones who belonged in
that house - a bedside story.

Tears suddenly exploded from Jasio's tightly closed eyes.  `I
hope I didn't hurt him.  Oh please, don't let him be hurt.'  The
man's words echoed in his mind, over and over.  Why did this
Party man have to say that!?  Why so ... cruel?!  To be so false!
Was he ... was this Party ... the very source of all the cruelty?
All the pain, and hatred, and ... every scuff, every kick ... every
bruise ... every moment of his hunger ....

Fighting the tears, fighting to hold back through clenched teeth
the moans of desperation and anger that threatened to reveal his
hiding place, Jasio could only watch, as the tall man started to
look over his cart.

"Oh my God!   It's a ... masterwork.  This cart."  The man said,
as he stooped then knelt down to examine Jasio's most prized
possession.   "This took real engineering skill, to even conceive
of this gear reduction.  I wish I could meet the man who designed
this."

"I ...," Jasio started to yell out, catching himself and ending in a
whisper, "made it ....'

The man's words struck like thunder and lightening into his
consciousness, and spread their electrifying charge deep into his
body.   Flash! and he felt spilling out of that most secret place of
longing and hurt, from that fenced-in, carefully guarded, tiny
little spot with his heart - the one thing that this boy had always
wanted more than anything else - he had imagined such
wonderful and practical and fantastical things, all his life, yet ...
never, not once, had anyone in his life ever told him that his
creations or ideas were interesting, or good, or even a possibility
- much less ever said anything he ever thought or did was good.
He had long ago quit sharing his imaginings with anyone.

Jasio wanted so desperately to feel the pride that had just welled
up within him, hearing the man's words - seeing him walking
around the cart, touching it, examining it.   More than that, he
felt that all too familiar fascination that so often took hold of
him - making him question everything, making him want to know
about everything!   What kind of man was this, who threw about
words of praise?  Was there the feeblest, even the remotest
chance, that another being in this world shared his own
wonderment?!

Of course there had to be!  Someone had to have designed and
built this car!  Someone had to have figured out how to bring
water to the crops!  Someone had to have made the first bread, or
built the first fire, or ....

But not ever Stupid Jasio!  This man would be just like all the
others.  He looked at Jasio's cart, so that he could scoff!  He
examined it, analyzed it, acted like he admired it - so that the
final, cruel kick would hurt all the worse!  He touched it ... so
that he could ... steal it!

All of Jasio's years of hurt and denial, all of his fear, all his
hunger and disappointed hope, mixed with years of scoffing and
ridicule and just plain neglect, suddenly boiled together into a
potion so powerful that he sprang up from behind his hiding
place and stood rigid for an instant, staring at this intruder, not
really knowing what he wanted to do.  He wanted to scream!  He
wanted to ... to kill that man!  He wanted to ... beg that man, to
listen, to hear, about all his ideas!  He wanted just one person in
all his world to be there, for him!

Then the man put his foot on the pedal of the cart, and tested the
action, forcing it forward.

Jasio stood aghast, then slowly, unconsciously, he sidestepped
around the bush, balling his fists, gathering his strength, feeling
the rage rising within him, scrunching his eyes, knowing he
could never stop the tears now.  Almost blindly now, lowering
his head like a charging bull,
he did scream - releasing all the anguish and indignation that had
built up within himself for years - and started running across the
dirt and gravel straight at the big Party man.


-------------------------------


September 14, 1959  5:05 PM


I swiveled on my heels, hearing the boy's banshee wail as he
darted across the gravel on the hard-packed earth.  The little guy
was slight, notwithstanding that big water-laden overcoat of his,
but he ran with such a berserker intent, that I had to brace
myself.

He came up on me with his little fists swinging and his head
hunched down, staring determinedly at me from under his
lowered brow. He rammed his head into me, right above my
waistline and started pummeling me, still screaming at the top of
his lungs.  "I made it!"  "It's mine!"  "Leave it alone!"  I made
out the pattern of his words, as he screamed them at me over and
over.

It's not every day that a boy attacks me with such ferocity!  I was
taken aback, to say the least, and for the first moments I really
just let him have his way with me.

Only when his little overburdened arms started to weaken, and
his blows became mere slaps against my midriff, did I finally
close my hands on his forearms as gently as I could, to really
stop him. His violent harangue against me melted instantly, and
he burst into helpless sobs, still trying to talk haltingly, but
incoherently, his eyes almost closed now, staring blindly straight
ahead at my stomach.  For a moment there, I don't even think he
knew I was there - he seemed lost in such a depth of anguish and
helplessness as I had never seen before.

He was a mere waif.  Thin and weakened by his spent emotions,
and no doubt by hunger - perhaps even malnutrition, by the look
of him.

My eyes told me many things about this boy, instantly.  The
first, the most obvious - whatever injury this boy had received in
his short life, it had not been from me.  He stood against me
bedraggled and filthy, his clothes, from what I could see as his
coat parted, mere unwashed rags.  He stank - of a garbage heap,
or compost heap, or ... from days and weeks ... months ... of
abject poverty and apparent neglect.  His hair hung in ragged,
caked strands about his face, sticking there from the wet and his
own filth.  No obvious wounds anywhere, no blood, no evidence
that he had limped or held back his blows.

I stood looking down at him and ... my own worries, my own
tears, my very reason for being on this road - all vanished from
my mind.  All I could see - all there was in my world, for that
moment, was a little circle of existence, where stood this boy ...
and myself ....

I had thought myself spent, after this long day standing against
wave after wave of reminiscence and emotion, but now I
plumbed my own true depths of anguish and despair ... and
something more ... something I had thought dead within me ...
something I had truly given up on long ago, years ago ...
thoughts, hopes, that had lain dormant ... and ... a desperate
desire ....

... for I was holding before me, in this small circle of our
existence, a BOY ... why did we meet now!?   I am a boylover,
by the gods!  By Marx and Engels!  Or whatever other powers
there be!  Why has this boy suffered so, when I am here, in his
very same world!?  He should have been mine!  I would have fed
him!  I would have clothed him!  Dammit, I would have cared for
him, loved him!  And every second of his life, through every trial
he has survived, just so, have I suffered through every second of
loneliness and longing and ....

I stood looking down on him as he raised his countenance to
mine, and I felt my lips starting to quiver, my jaw tightening, my
eyes closing JUST AS HIS!  The tears starting to trickle down
my cheeks, even as his flowed!

I could only stare, speechless, as he looked up into my eyes.   I
wondered what they were saying to me!  They seemed to belie
his words.

"Leave it alone!"  he said.  But I heard, `why weren't you here
before?!'   "Don't' touch it!" he said.  But I heard,  "You should
have held me tight through all my cold nights."   "It's mine - you
can't take it!" he said, but I heard, "why didn't you show me
how to build it better!"

I saw myself, back during the war days, building things from
scrap.  Rummaging through the battlefields ... or the bodies ...
for food ... anything that would sustain me and my friends for
another day in hiding.

Finally, pushing my past out of this little circle of our existence,
I finally gained enough of my wits about me to try to answer the
boy, to calm him, to assure him.  "S ... son ... I'm not going to
take your cart."  I tried to say it soothingly, certain that he saw
the sincerity in my eyes.  He stopped his litany for a moment,
and looked up with his mouth open.

"I would never take it from you! I ... think it's a magnificent ...
cart ... I'm amazed at how cleverly you built it ... I ... I would
never dream of taking it from you ...."

His eyes grew wider, focussing up at me.  Looking momentarily
astonished, in wonderment.  As if he heard words that didn't
quite register.

If he answered, at that moment, I didn't hear him.  I couldn't
possibly have heard him.  I was lost in wonderment myself,
stunned by the visage before me.  His eyes ... huge dark, dark
brown eyes, and dark brown, almost black eye lashes, so long
that they curled up at the ends.  Eyebrows so incredibly delicate,
of the most silken, almost transparent filaments - yet so dark and
black that they looked painted against his pale white flesh.  The
skin shown through those brows, snow-white, like the purest
setting for the ebony brush-strokes that swept up and out, over
his eyes, then down, just at the wispy end - making the boy look
as if he were questioning, examining, astonished, awed ... as if
there were nothing in this world that he did not wonder about.
Including me.

Yet in those eyes was a well of hurt ... and sorrow.  Perhaps
something more than sorrow.

Mourning?

These were eyes that saw into everything about them, eyes that
searched and reached out, but that had been  forced to close too
often, in tears.

I couldn't have heard him, if he spoke, but I do know that I
gulped, staring down at him, and that I started to raise my right
hand.  How I dared do it, I do not know.  Perhaps it was no
conscious thought that made me do it, rather a need within me ...
and a need I saw in his eyes.  Whatever made me do it, I brought
the pads of my fingers just up to his cheek, and touched him
there so very gently.

He stood still now, letting me touch him.  It was no doubt my
imagination, but I thought ... I dreamed ... that I felt him lean into
my touch.

His cheek was cold, below those enchanting eyes, and swept
down narrowly - there seemed a natural blush there - perhaps the
cold, perhaps burned by the unceasing drizzle ... or by his tears.
The redness seared the too delicate whiteness of his cheeks - he
was certainly undernourished, not just pale, but weak.

But his lips!  Red and full! He held them firmly together, as he
strained his head back to look up at me.

By the gods, in my very dreams I had never conjured up such
sweet lips.  They bowed in the middle, pushed out just slightly
by his teeth, giving him an expression - much like his eyes - of
awareness, even of knowing!  Of a smile that was born not from
glee, certainly not from any kind of happiness - just from being
somehow ... prescient!

His features were narrow, soft and delicately formed, so finely
proportioned - his nose, his cheeks, chin - and such a smooth,
high forehead.  His hair hung down over it - laid down over it
was a more apt description - laid down wet and in clumps,
uncombed and unkempt from hours and hours outdoors in the
rain and drizzle.  It hung just as wet, in plastered strands, all the
way down both sides of his head, far below his ears, to his neck
- seemingly molded or glued to his scalp and flesh in thick, dirty
clumps.  I wasn't even sure that it was just the rain that had
sculpted this dark frame around his face - his hair certainly had
not felt the loving touch of a mother's brush, for a long, long
time.

I moved my hand so slightly from his cheek, to gently draw one
wet clump of his hair between the pads of my thumb and
forefinger.  The silken strands slid smoothly over each other, but
I felt the grit there too.

What did this boy's gaze say to me?  What was this moment
saying to me?  Was there sorrow in his eyes?  Or defiance?  Or
even hope?  Did he see through me, in this instant of our
meeting?  Thirty-four year old man, disillusioned, ready to give
up - and suddenly wanting him so desperately that I had to steel
every muscle in my body to keep from crushing his frail body to
mine!  Did whatever he had been through in his short life allow
him to understand me, with his all-seeing gaze?   Would he hate
me?  Did he know me so well that I was abhorrent to him?

"Are you ... are you a Party man?" he suddenly said to me, in
almost a whisper?  Even then, there was a bell-like clarity to his
voice - high-pitched and sweet, holding the same questioning,
wondering insistence as his gaze.

"Well ... yes, I am," I admitted, not knowing whether that was
something he would hear with approval or disdain.  Government
officials were more often than not unwelcome out here in the
countryside.

"You can take my cart, but ... I'll ... I'll just build another one,"
he said so matter-of-factly, as if there were no doubt in his mind
that I was here to confiscate his belongings.

"I won't take your cart ... little boy," I repeated to him.

This conversation was surreal to me.  My mind reeled with the
impact of seeing him, seeing such beauty that years of
suppressed desire burst forth within me, seeing such need that I
wanted to grasp him to me and hold him tight, yet ... here he was,
certain that I had entered his world to steal his possessions.

"Then why are you here?" he said, looking up at me in
puzzlement, lowering his brow in suspicion.  I still held his arm
with my left hand.  I still held the soft strands of his hair
between my fingers.

He shrugged me off, twisting his arm from my grasp, and stepped
back.  I let go of his hair almost reluctantly, blushing, feeling
like the criminal that he thought I was.  Indicted by him.
Knowing in my heart that I was a good man, wasn't enough all of
a sudden.  He did not know that.  First I had come crashing in
with my car, then I had looked over his cart so inquisitively, now
I dared to touch him, thinking that one fraction of an instant of
my care would make some difference to him!

I staggered back, swiveling on my feet, off balance, against the
side of his cart.  I struggled to take a deep breath, then started to
turn back to him, but I couldn't!  I couldn't bear to look into
those eyes again, not knowing how to read them!

"I think you're ... ok ... son," I mumbled out, swiping my forearm
up across my face.  What to do next?  He ... didn't want the likes
of me ... here.  "Are you ... alright?  Did I hurt you?"

"Your car didn't hit me, if that's all you mean," he answered,
sounding somehow bitter and reproachful.  Or was that just my
imagination?  I still couldn't turn back his way, to meet his
questioning gaze again.

I felt so tired and weak again, and wasn't even sure of why I
should feel so guilty.  It certainly was not because I desired this
boy, not because I saw his beauty, not because I wanted to hold
him and cherish him - not in all my years had I ever regretted
being what I am.  I knew the goodness of it, when I lay in
Stefan's arms, so many years ago.  Tomek cemented that
certainty, with every loving and kind act during the war.  Loving
a boy, giving of yourself to him, is an act of the purist, most
beneficent good.  Admiring his beauty is an acknowledgment of
your dedication to that good.

I felt guilty because ... what could I do?  What would I do?!  He
wasn't my boy.  He didn't want my touch.  He didn't even want
me here.  I was ... the enemy ... the Party man ... a threat ....

Maybe it wasn't guilt I felt.  More like an utter and complete
hopelessness.  My life was littered with such encounters.
Couldn't every boylover say the same?  Only the War had made
it possible for Tomek and his boys to shirk society's bounds.
This boy, however abject his need, was but another brief
encounter.

I pushed myself upright, and turned to walk back to my car, my
head down.  Digging into my kit, in the back seat, I pulled out a
packed of sandwiches, then walked back to the boy.

"Here ... uh ... son ... there's something to eat, in here.  You get
... home ... you'll be ok ...  I never intended to take your cart ... I
never ... did.  I gotta ... go ... I'll be late ..." I said, still
awkwardly avoiding his eyes.  I paused for a moment just
standing there, glancing first at the cart, then the ground, then
allowing my eyes to graze his face once again, almost afraid of
any response.

He took the packet from me.  I watched his little hands,
miniature versions of my own, as he placed them on either side
of the package.  Our finger tips touched!  On both sides, he
seemed to intentionally let just the tips of his long middle
fingers graze mine.

Now HE had touched ME!  I dared to look up then, directly into
his eyes.  He was scanning my face - that same querulous
expression there, but somehow ... not so ... harsh.  Not so much
of that suspicion in them, as before, but more of a ... probe ...
like I was a strange object that he had to examine and analyze.

I ... couldn't stand it.  Not now.  Not after my day-long search
for any kind of answers myself.   I was going to have to leave this
boy here, and I'd never see him again, and whatever questions he
had I would never be able to answer anyway ...

Dropping my eyes, and without another word, I turned and
strode back to the car, stumbling over my own feet, knowing that
he was watching me. With more force than necessary, I lunged
into it, through the gaping door, and pulled it shut with a bang.

I had the presence of mind to ease the clutch in, at least, and
move off slowly. I peered into the rear-view mirror, and saw the
boy just standing there watching me, holding the package of
sandwiches in both hands before him.  I pulled farther and
farther away, and his form started to melt into the growing
darkness of the trees surrounding the turnout.

I realized that I wasn't breathing, that while I had watched the
little boy's form recede into the distance, it was like my own life
was suspended.  I allowed myself a halting breath, and then in a
futile acknowledgment of my fate, I lifted my hand and gave a
weak wave.

"Good-bye, little one.  Take care of ... yourself ...."


-------------------------------


September 14, 1959  5:09 PM


Jasio stood transfixed as the tall man and his car slowly gathered
speed, and drew farther and farther away.

First the sound of gravel scrunching under the tires, then the
engine taking over as the wheels reached the quiet surface of the
black-topped road, then ... little more than two little red lights
growing closer and closer together with each passing moment.
That, and the wonder.

He could still see the man's face.   Clean.  Strong.  Chiseled!
That was it.  A face chiseled like that old statue, hidden out in
the ruins.

The man's face, looking down at him, with those eyes of his
searching, like they would drill holes in Jasio's own eyes,
looking deep into him.  People just didn't act like that!  At least
the people around here.

And when the man felt his cheek, and ... tested his hair, rubbing
it ... people didn't do those things either.  Not to Jasio.  Maybe
to some other child, but never, ever to Jasio.

Then ... the things he said ... `your cart' ... `it's magnificent' ...
`Go home' ... `something for you to eat' ....

Jasio gripped the package of sandwiches tight, feeling their
substance - they were real.  This had really happened.  The car
was gone now.  The silence of the cold, wet night had descended
completely, and the boy was alone again.

`Go home.'

He heard the words again.  He looked about him, slowly, then
off towards the direction of the collective compound.

`Go home.'

Jasio closed his eyes for a moment, and saw the man's face
looking down at him.  So tall.  His hair dark, and hanging down
over his forehead loosely.  Broad shoulders, making his long
gray overcoat hang loose all the way to the ground ... yes ... just
like the statue in the ruins ... and now ... gone ... no more real
than the man who once looked down upon his sculptor.

`Go home.'

Jasio looked down at the package, wondering.  He had touched
the man's hands, just to make sure, but ... even though he was
real ... the moment was fleeting ... and now gone.

`Come back.' He closed his eyes, wanting to recapture that
moment.  His narrow chest lifted underneath his coat, and he
sighed deeply.  How many times had he imagined a line, and
himself standing on it. Always moving forward, always looking
towards the end of the line.  Now suddenly, he wanted to turn,
and step back.

`Come back.'

`Go home .'

`We never go back, do we,' he mused sadly, letting the words
fall flat into the damp air.  Slowly he crawled under his cart, and
sat cross-legged on the bare ground.  Home.

The cold and the dark were now a part of him.  He felt the
clinging wetness of his rags against his skin.

`We can't look back,' he muttered, then centered the package of
food in his lap, and so very carefully unwrapped it.  New soles
for his shoes, this wrapper.  One night without the awful grip of
pain in his stomach, this food.

One moment, already gone forever, that man.