Home > Every Exquisite Thing(18)

Every Exquisite Thing(18)
Author: Matthew Quick

It’s past the playground

On the other side of a hill

Atop which kids can look down

And jeer and snarl and clap

As noses explode and

Knees launch up into groans

And shirts are ripped

I go there now even

Though I am too old

And tall enough to cast

A shadow for miles

And I close one eye

So the kids will think I am

A Cyclops who moans and

Grunts instead of speaking

I go because there is often a

Kid who reminds me of me

When I was in middle school—

Round, red-cheeked, outnumbered

With his fists up just below his glasses

Showing infinitely more guts than

The cocky boy who had the crowd

On his side before he even lifted

His symphony-conductor hands

I usually just yell and moan and play

The monster until everyone runs away

And I’m left with the round lonely boy

Who was me just a few years ago

And I’ll tell him middle school

Doesn’t

Last

Forever

He doesn’t ever believe me

But I can tell he’s always glad

I stopped by

This one time I came too late

And the pretty, thin boy

Had the ugly, round

Boy on his back, pinned

Knees on elbows and

Pretty was slapping Ugly

Whose red tear-streaked cheeks

Made the crowd roar

And so I opened both eyes

Became me again

Ran down the hill

Picked up the pretty boy by the

Belt and collar and threw him

High into the air

So that he would know

What it feels like to fall

His head hit the ground first—hard

Enough for grass stains

On his cheek and nose

And I sat on his chest

And I slapped his face

And I told him that his days

Were numbered

And today was zero

I am the Bubblegum Reaper!

I am the Bubblegum Reaper!

I am the Bubblegum Reaper!

I am the Bubblegum Reaper!

I am the Bubblegum Reaper!

I said with each slap

And then I released him like

A fish you catch in polluted

Water and cannot eat

The young round boy stayed behind

When the rest left and he said,

“They’re gonna kill me tomorrow”

So I walked that kid home

And I talked to his mom

Who fed me dinner

And I told her she needed

To help

Or at least notice

I went to the old middle school

The next day after high school

And the round kid was looking scared

Again, surrounded by pretty boys

So I played the Cyclops once more

And they all ran, like pretty boys do

I taught the kid to close

One eye and moan

Like a monster

Whenever the pretty boys

Get too close

And now as he waves his arms

Over his head screaming

He is almost

A Cyclops too

But not quite yet

It’s okay because pretty boys

They don’t know

The

Difference

Most

Of

The

Time

And so

The boy can be a boy

A little bit longer

14

Shifted the Conversation Like a Knife Across My Throat

The soccer team kept winning games without me. Shannon kept running to the flag and crossing the ball, and other girls started to score, and soon the hateful glances I was receiving in the hallway turned into no glances at all. Maybe I was far enough away from the cage. Maybe they couldn’t whack me anymore.

Free from varsity-soccer-cult rules, I began sitting on an outdoor bench during lunch periods to read Alex’s poetry or The Bubblegum Reaper, because we were trying to determine once and for all if Wrigley had fallen for Stella or Lena and were certain that there must be a clue we were missing.

Alex had written a poem called “So I Played the Cyclops,” which thrilled and scared me simultaneously. When he gave me a traced copy, he said it was based on an experience he had “not so long ago,” when he started hanging around his old middle school, looking for lonely kids who needed help. He did this because he used to fantasize about someone coming to help him when he was being picked on in middle school. He also did it to be like his hero, Wrigley.

The poem made me think about the high school boys who used to come to my middle school with bottles of peach schnapps, looking to bribe younger girls into giving them head. Alex was the opposite of those boys at the center of our middle school sex scandal. I loved him for that. But the rage that was so evident in his poetry was a little frightening, too. I didn’t want to date a Cyclops.

“Did you really throw some eighth grader through the air?” I asked him after I had read the poem. We were parked in a field with the Jeep’s top down, looking up at a hunter’s moon glowing like an enormous flaming pumpkin just over the distant trees. Alex wanted me to listen to a song called “Midnight Surprise” by Lightspeed Champion in the open fall air. It was a really cool song. Weird in a good way. And almost ten minutes long. After it was over, I told him I enjoyed the experience, and we talked about the lyrics at length. Then I said, “Did you really slap the pretty boy in your poem? You must have been twice his size.”

“So was Wrigley when he held that kid underwater. The kid who was spinning Unproductive Ted. Remember?”

“Yeah, but that was just a fictional story.”

“No, it wasn’t. Wake up, princess,” he said, referencing “Midnight Surprise.”

“You think Booker really did that? You think he actually almost drowned a little kid?”

“Sometimes you have to fight against it,” Alex said. “If you don’t fight against it, you lose yourself.”

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