Date: Sat, 12 Sep 2009 17:48:14 +0000 (GMT)
From: Nexis Pas <nexispas@yahoo.co.uk>
Subject: The Runcible Lad

The Runcible Lad

Nexis Pas

Copyright 2009 by the author

Nexis Pas asserts the moral right to be identified as the author of this
work.

Yeah, I'm nervous. I've never been this nervous before. I'm not too proud
to admit that. Look at my hands. They're shaking, and we've not even begun
yet. I didn't expect to be this wound up. I'm not worried about the
ceremony at the registrar's. That'll be over in a few minutes. That's
nothing. Henry says 'I do' and I say 'I do' and then we sign our names on
the document. In at 10:45 and out by 11:00. That's just me and Henry and
our parents and our friends Linc and Des as witnesses.

It's later that's making my stomach churn. At the hall we rented. When I
have to get up in front of all our friends and all our relations and say
something about why I'm there and what it means to me. Everyone I know will
be there, and I don't want to look a fool. I want to say that I'm the
luckiest man in the world. I want to tell them that. I want to tell Henry
that. I've told him that before, but I want to tell him that in front of
everyone so that they know it too.

But I don't want to be a fool. I don't want to do that to Henry. For the
past two weeks, this groom's speech is all I've thought about. And I can't
ask anybody about it. They'll think me a right git if I admit to being
worried about it. But Henry deserves my best today. I guess I just want to
say something important, something that everybody will remember, something
that Henry will remember. A gift, it should be like my wedding gift to
him. That's what I want to do. Give him this gift in front of everyone and
let them share in it.

I'm just no good with words. That's my problem. It's like the day I met
Henry. I couldn't find anything to say. I just stood there with my mouth
open making noises. Grunting like. I was walking Blue--that's my dog--I was
walking Blue in the park, and Henry--well, I didn't know it was Henry at
the time. There was this man playing with a child. They were chasing each
other around a tree. The child was shrieking, and the man was
laughing. They were so happy. Everybody was smiling because of them. I
thought they were father and son. I found out later that Carl was Henry's
nephew. He's going to be there today. Carl, I mean. He's almost four
now. Of course, Henry's going to be there.

I'm not telling this very well. I just can't think straight today. Anyway,
Carl spots the dog and he stops running and says 'dog'. You know how
children fix on things that catch their eyes. One minute Carl is chasing
Henry around that tree, and the next moment he toddling toward me pointing
at Blue, saying 'dog, dog'. Of course, Henry came up behind Carl just to
make sure that Blue didn't hurt him. He knelt down behind Carl and
stretched his arms out around him. Not to keep him away from Blue, but just
to be there to protect Carl in case Blue didn't like kids or
something. Henry's like that. He tries to protect everyone he loves.

So Henry bends forward and kind of whispers aloud into Carl's ear and tells
him to ask 'the nice man' what the doggie's name is. Then Henry looks up at
me, directly into my eyes, and smiles. And it was like a flash of lightning
going off inside my head. There was this loud noise, I swear, like
thunder. That'd never happened to me before. It wasn't love at first
sight. The love came later. I don't know what caused all that commotion. It
was just something right and good for once, something that felt like it had
to be.

You've seen Henry. He's not bad looking. But he's not handsome or
gorgeous. I mean he's nice looking but he's not spectacular or anything
like that. I'm not either. I'm not complaining. It's just that he doesn't
have the type of looks to cause explosions. Yet there's this roaring in my
ears, and I'm seeing black spots in front of my eyes, and he's looking at
me as if he's beginning to wonder if I'm the village idiot, and then I
stammer out 'Boo'.

And Henry says to Carl, 'The doggie's name is Boo. Can you say 'Boo'?

Carl reaches out a finger toward Blue and says 'Boo' and then he starts
screaming with laughter and shouting 'Boo, Boo, Boo.' Blue is leaning
forward trying to smell Carl, and Carl touches Blue's nose with his
finger. And Blue licks Carl's hand and then Carl jerks his finger back and
starts laughing even harder. Then he puts his hand out toward Blue again.

That sets Blue off and he's pulling against his lead and standing on his
hind legs and leaping up and down so that he can get closer and lick Carl's
face. Henry lifts Carl away, and I bend over and try to grab Blue. Blue's
jumping about, and I lose my balance. That's when I fell over. There I am,
lying on my back on the path trying to hold on to a squirming dog, and Carl
is all excited and Blue is barking just to add his bit to the noise and
this god I just met is helping me up and then brushing the dirt off my
clothes and asking me if I'm all right.

I suppose I could tell that story. Lots of people tell funny stories about
themselves at their wedding suppers. But I don't want to make a joke. In
any case, I'm not good at telling jokes at the best of times, and today I
know I'm not going to be at my best.

And I don't want to say anything dirty. I've heard people do that on their
wedding days, and it's not right. I mean the sex is great. I had good sex
before I met Henry, but then it was just something that happened to me. It
wasn't something I did. But the first time I went to bed with Henry after I
knew that I loved him, I wanted to make it good. I wanted to make him know
that I was going to spend the rest of my life making him feel great. And
you know that made all the difference. When he moaned for the first time,
it was like this explosion of joy going off in my bedroom. I didn't know. I
didn't know how much better sex can be when you love the other person until
I met Henry. But I don't want to talk about that. That's between Henry and
me. That's private like.

I don't know how people get through all this. Maybe every groom is
nervous. When I was ten or so, there was this older couple on our
street. They were in their nineties and they had their seventy-fifth
wedding anniversary, and everyone in the neighbourbood got together to
celebrate. They closed off the road and then put trestle tables down the
middle and covered them over with coloured paper. Everyone brought food,
and we had this great roaring party. They had games and funny hats and
noisemakers and balloons. There was a band and dancing and fireworks at
night. And Mr Moore stood up and said how nervous he had been on their
wedding day seventy-five years ago but that he knew that everything would
come right in the end because he and his wife were like a poem, a proper
poem with rhymes where everything fits together right and all the words are
just what has to be said.

Maybe I should tell that story. Then I could say that that's what I would
like, a party on our seventy-fifth anniversary. I'll invite everyone to our
seventy-fifth anniversary party. In seventy-five years, both Henry and I
will be 98. We could live that long. People are living longer now. That's
what I would like--to have the neighbours throw us a party in the middle of
the street. Maybe I could say something like that. Do you think that would
be all right?

Oh, what idiot thought up weddings? There must be a simpler way for two
lads to get married. Yeah, yeah, I know we're not supposed to call it a
'marriage'. It's a 'civil partnership', but to me and Henry it's our
wedding day and we're getting married, and anybody who says different--well
I'm not starting a fight at my own wedding but I'll not forget.

Oh, Christ, look at the time. It's already 10:15. Linc and Des will be here
to pick me up in a few minutes, and I've not even put my tie on yet. I
bought this blue tie yesterday. Is it all right? Does it look good with
this suit? Or would my red tie be better?