Every since
I've known him, my best friend Gene has always been a story teller. He's good
at it, too, most of them having to do with things that have happened to him at
work on his job as a carpenter. Like uncovering a nest of garter snakes,
('There must have been ten thousand the friggin' things), or the time he almost
got hit by lightning ('I couldn't hear a thing for the rest of the god damn day'),
or the time he shot himself in the foot with a nail gun ('Hurt like a
son-of-a-bitch'). Stuff like that. He was pretty funny, too, how he told them,
and I enjoyed listening to him. He always made me laugh.
Last summer we had gotten in the
habit of sitting on a couple of lawn chairs in his garage on Sunday afternoons,
having a few beers and listening to the Twins game on the radio. Gene wasn't
always a carpenter. Twenty seven years earlier, for a brief period of time, he played
first base and batted fifth for the Quad City River Bandits, a Class A baseball
team affiliated with the Houston Astros. On that July afternoon during game
between the Twins and Kansas City, he
told me a story with a different tone to it. One that wasn't funny at all. One
I'll never forget. It was about when he visited a prostitute in downtown Rock
Island, Illinois.
"Yeah, it was on my nineteenth
birthday," he said, turning serious as he lowered the volume on the radio.
Then he cracked open a cold can of Hamm's. I half expected him to switch gears
after setting me for something heavy and start telling me a funny story, like
when there was once a rain delay and the ball diamond turned into a lake and
the fans in the stands as well as both teams went skinny dipping. You, know,
making a joke, out of things. It was the kind of thing he might do.
But he didn't.
"My friends from the River
Bandits were behind it all," he said, using finger quotes around friends
to make the point that, even though they were teammates, his friends weren't
really his friends. "There was Stinky, Fred, Jorge and Harper,
all..."
"Wait a minute," I
interrupted, "Stinky?"
"Yeah," Gene looked at me
like I was dense, "You know, cuz of his feet." He crinkled up his
nose, remembering, I suppose, the noxious aroma emanating from his teammate's
baseball cleats. Probably not the most pleasant memory in his arsenal of
memories, I wagered. Then he took a sip of beer.
In my mind I went, Oh, well, sure.
Feet. Of course.
"I guess the smell is caused by
bacteria on the sweat glands," he informed me, pointing to his boots propped
up on a milk crate, "In Stinky's case he must have had twice as many as
everyone else, cuz, man, they were always pretty ripe..."
I put my hand up, "Stop, stop,
stop. Way too much info."
"Well, you asked."
"Right. Well never mind. I get
it."
"So can I get back to my story?"
I waved my can of beer at him,
"Go ahead."
"As I was saying, those guys
set the whole thing up. We were at home playing a double header with the Lansing
Lugnuts."
I coughed out a laugh, spewing a
mist of beer. "The Lugnuts?"
Gene was getting exasperated.
"Yes, and they were damn good. Do you want to hear my story or not?"
I did. "Sorry. Go on," I
wiped my nose. A little beer had gone up it.
"We lost the first game in the
afternoon, and won the second in the evening, so I was in a pretty good
mood." He smiled, thinking back to that night. Gene's team had been based
in Davenport, Iowa, and he'd told me many times that they were 'Marginally Ok,'
as he put it, finishing in the middle of the seventeen team Midwest League each
of the two seasons he was with them. "Harper was twenty-eight, the oldest
guy on the team and the ring leader. He organized everything. The guys borrowed
a car, made the arrangement with Jackie and..."
"Whose Jackie?"
"Geez!" he exclaimed and
stopped talking for a moment. He stared at me for a long couple of seconds
before asking, "Who do you think?"
"Oh," I said, " Yeah,
right."
I was pretty excited to hear his
story. Most guys would be. After all, that first time always sticks in your
mind, doesn't it? At least mine always has - a misfire of mammoth proportions
on my part with my college sweet heart, the ever patient and long suffering Molly
Henderson.
"So they had me all set to go.
All I had to do was follow their lead. Problem was, I guess I wasn't
ready."
"A bit of premature
issue?" I asked. This time it was me using finger quotes around premature.
I was sympathetic to what I imagined might have happened.
"Something like that."
Damn. I was hoping he'd had a more
successful first time than me, but I guess I was going to be disappointed.
"What happened?"
"After we won that second game,
we were all pretty stoked. We went to a bar across the river in Rock Island.
It's a college town you know, and the place had some weird name like The
Smiling Toad or something like that. It was just off the interstate in Illinois
and down near the river bottoms - the Mississippi. It looked like it was a old
roadhouse of some kind because the parking lot was dirt and there were trees
all around, like it was carved out of a forest. It was pretty secluded and the
place was packed. Anyway, we were going
to have a few beers to celebrate the win, my birthday, and my pending present
from the guys." He stopped talking for a moment before continuing, "I
have to say, talking about this...it's embarrassing."
Well, he started it. Ten minutes
earlier, I was happy just listening to the Twins playing the Royals.
"You don't have to tell me if
you don't want to," I told him.
"No. I kind of want to. Need
to, actually."
It dawned on me that he was really
agonizing over this. I liked Gene a lot and I wanted to be supportive.,
"Go ahead, man, it's happened to millions of guys," I told him,
surmising that millions was probably way too low an estimate.
"The bar was loud, some local
band was playing Led Zeppelin covers, and I was tossing back those brewskie's
like I was drinking glasses of water." He looked at the can of Hamm's he
was holding, grimaced, and set it down on the cement floor. Then he continued,
"When I was pretty well on my way to feeling no pain, the guys got me to
my feet, held me steady, and led me outside. I remember stumbling down the
steps into the parking lot and falling down at least once on the way to the car
- probably a lot more than that. Not my finest moment, that's for sure."
He looked at me and I just shook my
head. No it wasn't. Nowadays, Gene is a pretty sober guy, a hard worker and
devoted family man. But back then at nineteen...well, hell, we've all done
stupid things when we were young, right? I told him, "Don't worry, man,
we've all been there."
I think he appreciated that I
understood the limitations inherent in his intoxicated state and went on,
"I guess earlier one of the guys had moved the rental to the far side of
the parking lot, over by the forest and away from the floodlights. It seemed
like the walk took forever. Stinky put his arm around me as we made our way up
to the car and said, 'Here we go, Slugger, it's your big night. Get ready for
the time of your life.'
"Talk about adding to the
pressure, right?" I asked.
"No kidding. When we finally
got to the car, Harper opened the back door and leaned in and said, 'Here he
is.' Stinky gave me the tiniest shove and told me, 'Good luck,' and I went
tumbling inside, not knowing what to expect. Then they slammed the door."
"Man..." I said, just to say
something. "Not good," I added. What a bad situation. I was beginning
to really feel for the guy.
"No kidding. Not good is
putting it mildly."
"What happened then?"
"The guys I was with, my
friends (finger quotes again) just laughed. The window was down and Stinky leaned
in and said to me, 'Her name is Jackie. You all have fun,' and then they left.
I could hear them laughing all the way across the parking lot back to the
bar."
"Not the best beginning,"
I observed.
"No. Not at all," Gene
said, turning to me, "And it didn't get any better from there." He
paused again, picturing, I'm sure, how events played out. It was not a pretty
picture I was guessing, more Jackson Pollack than Claude Monet. It turns out I
was right (about it not being a pretty picture, that is), but I was way wrong
about what had happened. In fact, I've been wrong about a lot of things in my
life, but never more wrong than when it came to Gene and Jackie. He continued
with his story, turning even more serious, "Here's the deal, Ed. When I finally
got up the courage to look at her, I couldn't believe what I saw. In my mind I
was picturing a sexy woman in her late twenties, with wavy, blond hair, blue
eyes and a great build, wearing a short, tight, red dress and perfume that
smelled like vanilla. You know, some weird preconceived sexist image."
Yeah, I thought to myself, something a nineteen year old horny guy (if not a
lot of other guys) with an over active imagination and no girl friend might
have. He continued, "But the person I was sitting next to was nothing like
that. Not at all." He looked at me, imploring me to believe him.
I did. His seriousness and tone made
what he was telling me quite believable. In fact, I'd never seem him as upset
as he was. For some reason I lowered my voice almost to a whisper, "What
was she like?"
He was clearly agitated. Beads of
sweat had broken out on his forehead. "Ed, she was so young! She looked
like she was only fifteen. She reminded me of my sister, of all things."
He twisted his hands and then rubbed them on the thighs of his jeans.
Shit. Not good. I'd seen enough news
coverage about underage prostitution rings to know horrific they were.
"That absolutely sucks," I said.
"No kidding," he shook his
head some more and then continued, "It made me sick back then and it makes
me sick now, just thinking about it," he looked me in the eye, "She
was nothing like I'd imaged. She..." He shook his head, at a loss for
words.
I understood where he was coming
from. "Unbelievable," I said, then thought to clarify, "Fifteen
you think?"
He shook his head some more,
chagrined at the memory, "I'd guess, yeah. She looked lots younger than
me, that was for sure. She had short dark hair and bangs, and was wearing blue
jeans and some kind of white peasant shirt with embroidery on it. I remember
she wore a thin gold chain necklace that had a little gold heart." He was
quiet for a moment and added, almost in a whisper, "She looked like a
little kid."
The garage fell quiet except for the
muted game in the background. We were both lost in our thoughts. Finally, I
said, "Well, you did the right thing."
"What do you mean?"
"You left right away didn't
you?"
Gene face turned beet red.
"Well, no."
"What!?"
"But I should have," he
was quick to add, "I mean, I would now. I mean...," he was clearly flummoxed.
"What happened?" I asked,
testily.
"Well, remember, I was pretty
drunk. Plus, I was looking forward to this to happening, so I tried to ignore
her age and rise to the occasion, so to speak."
Man, I couldn't believe what he was
telling me. I got mad. He should have just left. Taking advantage of an
underage person (girl!) was not cool in my book. Apparently it wasn't in Gene's
either, he just didn't know it then.
"How'd that go for you?" I
asked sarcastically, "Did you get your birthday present? " I didn't
even bother with the finger quotes. I was disappointed in him. And myself. I averted
his gaze and looked into the corner of the garage where the radio was. The
Twins were batting in the bottom of the seventh but I have to say, I wasn't really
paying attention anymore. The unsetting thought had just occurred to me that I
might had done exactly the same thing if I'd been in his situation. Believe me,
it was not a pleasant character trait to have to face, but there you had it. Then
I remembered he was only nineteen (me, too, in my imagination.) We all make mistakes.
I know I certainly had. Have. Did. I calmed down a little to let both him and
me off the hook."Sorry," I said, "It's just out of character for
you, is all."
He smiled a wan smile, "Well, thanks
for that. I was stupid and deserved what I got. So, no, I didn't get my
present. Not even close. Let's just say that too much beer and too much
quilt...well, they just don't make for a happy ending, if you know what I
mean."
I nodded, unfortunately having been
there in the beer scenario way too many times, "Yeah, I definitely know
what you mean."
Gene was silent for a moment,
listening to the Twins. He turned up the volume a little. Buxton has just hit a
triple. We both smiled. Gene picked his beer up from the floor and we taped our
cans. But my friend wasn't done with his story yet, not by a long shot.
"I have to tell, you, though,
she was really nice about it. I remember she patted my shoulder, and said
something like, 'It's Ok, Slugger, it happens more often than you think,' which
didn't make me feel any better, but she was so sweet about it that I almost
believed her."
It was nice she tossed him a life line,
I thought. In fact, she sounded like she was a decent person. I was curious,
though, and asked, "Then what happened?"
"The weirdest thing. I pulled
up my jeans and was getting ready to leave, but she stopped me, put her hand on
my arm and said, 'Do you have a cigarette? Your friends have already paid. We
could just sit here and talk or something.'
"You're kidding," I said.
Then I remembered her age. Maybe she just wanted a break in what I could only
imagine was a god awful life. A few minutes of peace. Plus, even back then I'm
assuming Gene was a nice guy, like he is now. Maybe she was being honest with
him.
Gene started shaking his head again.
"I just wish I hadn't drunk all the beer. I would have enjoyed just
sitting there with her. I didn't have a girl friend. I'd always been shy and
didn't date much, so it would have been nice to be with her and, you know, just
talk."
Given all that had happened that
night, I could see his point. "So did you?"
"No. Didn't get a chance,"
he said.
"Why?"
"Right about then, the cops
showed up."
I coughed and choked on the beer I
had just drunk. "What?" I managed to quite literally spit out.
"You've got to be kidding me."
"Yeah. Well, no, I'm not
kidding. We were in the back seat remember. Just sitting there, me wondering
what to do next and trying to sober up. Jackie offering to talk. Then, all of a
sudden two cop cars came tearing into the parking lot, sirens wailing, lights
flashing, tires spinning. The dirt was flying everywhere. My first thought was
that I was going to get busted."
"What'd you do?"
"Well, I started sweating like
a pig."
"No. I mean the cops. Did the
cops surround your car and arrest you or something?"
I'd watched enough television to
have a crystal clear picture in my head of the events unfolding. I could see
the squad cars skidding to a stop in a cloud of dust right next to Gene and
Jackie. I could see the cops jumping out, pulling their guns and surrounding
the car, pointing high beam flashlights at them and shouting for them to 'Get
out of the car! Get out of the car!' Or 'Down on the ground! Down on the
ground!' Or 'Don't move or else!' Or something like that. My imagination was
working overtime.
"Man, not good. Did you get
arrested?"
"Arrested?" Gene laughed,
"Not on your life."
I was confused. What about the police
surrounding the car and pointing their guns and all the yelling and all that
stuff. "Well, what happened?"
"We ran."
"Ran?"
"Yeah. It was Jackie's idea. As
soon as the cops pulled into the parking lot, she took one look and said something
like, 'Shit, let's get out of here.' She opened the door on her side, got out,
grabbed my hand and pulled me along with her. We ran in the opposite
direction."
"What the hell?"
"Yeah. Remember we were at the
edge of the parking lot? Well, she pulled me into the underbrush next to the
car and then into the woods and we ran as fast as we could, busting through the
forest, falling down, getting smacked in the face with branches and all
scratched up. Eventually we made it made a quarter of a mile or so to the
Mississippi, slid down the bank and right into the river. Man, I'll tell you, that
muddy water sobered me up quick." He laughed at the memory and looked at
me. I'm sure my mouth was hanging open. This stuff only happened in the movies,
didn't it? "It was a blast," he added, smiling some more and taking a
healthy drink of beer.
"Weren't you scared?"
"I was too drunk to be scared.
Besides, it turned out the police weren't there to bust an underage hooker and
a misguided, drunken, nineteen year old guy. They were there to break up a big brawl
in the bar," he laughed, "They didn't have a clue about us."
All I could think to say was,
"Amazing."
Gene sat back and took another
swallow of his beer. "Yeah it was. And you want to know the really amazing
part?"
There was more?
"Absolutely."
"Well, Jackie and I sat on the
bank of the river all night long, just talking and getting to know each other. It
was first time that'd ever happened to me with a girl."
Shit, it was just like in the
movies!
"Turns out she was a great person."
(Right then I started picturing that movie with Richard Gere and what's her
name in it, the prostitute he befriends.) "She told me her story: that she
was eighteen and she and a few of her friends were 'Hooking,' as she called it,
for extra money that summer. She was going to use it when she started college
in Decorah that fall. I'll tell you this, Ed, we hit it off right off the bat.
No baseball pun intended." Pun or not, he gave me a big, silly, grin.
"Are you going to tell me you
not only became friends, but you started going out?"
"Yeah, and then some."
I was finding this increasingly hard
to believe."What more could there be?" I asked somewhat skeptically.
"We became friends. We started
dating and..." he said, drawing it out. The garage went quiet except for
the radio. In the background Polanco singled home Dozier. The Twins were up
5-2.
"And then what?" I asked, despite
my skepticism, I was drawn in by his story and anxious to find out what
happened.
"Three years later we got
married."
Oh. My. God.
Gene and I had
become friends twenty one years earlier when our girls started playing soccer
on the same team in the Long Lake under seven soccer league. We were both in
our late twenties, enjoyed doing stuff with our kids, and shared a common
philosophy regarding children's athletics: the main thing was to have fun when
you were playing the game. Learning new skills, learning how to play as a team,
those kinds of things were good, too. Winning was way down on the list. That
first year our kids' team challenged that philosophy by winning two games out
of fifteen and finishing dead last in the league. But we bought the team, The
Long Lake Lady Lilies, dilly bars at DQ after every game, and the little girls
were happy and had fun, so that's what counted.
Anyway, back then Gene had just
started working for a general contractor in the western Hennepin county area.
He was busy a lot, so I ended up car pooling his daughter, Samantha, along with
my daughter, Ellie, to a lot of the games. To make up for it, he'd invite me
and my wife, Chris, and Ellie and our son, Ethan, over on Sunday afternoons to barbeque
brats, toss the Frisbee around and hang out. Over that first summer not only
did Gene and I get close, but so did my wife and his wife, Beth, or BJ as he
called her.
BJ worked part-time at Ridgedale, the
big shopping Mall seven miles east of us, at Macy's in the jewelry department. Chris
made hand-crafted place mats and table runners on her loom in our basement that
she sold on-line. They both were devoted mothers, and they both enjoyed
gardening and reading, so they had more than a few things in common. To make a
long story short, over the years we all become close friends, eventually
working our way up to spending the occasional Thanksgiving together, along with
ever single Fourth of July and Memorial Day and Labor Day for the past twenty years.
It was as good a friendship as four people could ever have.
Gene was a big man, standing
six-three, and towering over my five-ten. He outweighed me, too, by probably fifty
or sixty pounds, all of it muscle, not like my jelly belly flab. And that man
was strong, I'll tell you. I've seen him carry a forty pound bag of concrete
mix under each arm like it was nothing. Me? One bag and two hands and I could
barely lift it, let alone carry it.
He dressed in blue jeans, work
boots, and flannel shirts most of the time except for when the Minnesota
summers turned hot and humid. Then he ditched the flannel for white tee-shirts
but kept the jeans and boots. He wore his dark hair long, tied it back in pony
tail and kept his salt and pepper beard neatly trimmed. He kind of reminded me of
a mountain man. Anyway, the point of all of this is that he was one big guy who
could have used his size to intimidate people but he didn't. He was one of the
kindest people I'd ever met. He gave money to numerous environmental
organizations, donated his time at the local senior living complex by helping
out doing odd jobs, and even kept the grass cut on his next door neighbor's
lawn, Mrs. Halverson, a eighty-two year old widow, who Gene said reminded him
of his mother.
Last fall he told me he wanted to
tear down his old, single story garage and build a new one. "Yeah, it's
going to be double wide with space in the back for my workbench and tools. I'm
even going to make room for us so we can sit and visit and listen to the games.
Like a clubhouse," he tapped his temple and smiled, "I'm thinking all
the time, buddy. I'm even going to put in a stove for heat and a refrigerator, you
know, in case we want some beers."
I liked how his mind worked.
Initially he was going to do the
construction himself but I ended up helping, which was an experience in and of
itself because handy with any kind of tools I'm not. Even the simple task of hammering
a nail straight gives me problems. They always bend. Early in our marriage
Chris kindly of put up with my lack of skill in the home maintenance
department, saying encouragingly on many occasions, "That's Ok, Eddie, at
least you tried." Nowadays she simply says, "Ed, don't waste your
time. Just call Gene." So I do, and the job gets done, done fast, and done
right.
So after twenty years or so of him
helping me out, I felt I owed him more than the occasional gift card for a dinner
out with BJ or a case of Hamm's (conveniently, both his and my favorite beer.)
"How about if I help with the garage?" I asked him that afternoon
when I was over watching as the bobcat demolish the eighty year old structure
in about ten minutes, "It's the least I can do after all you've done for
me."
Gene looked at me askance,
"Carpentry, Ed? Are you sure?"
I understood his reticence. After
all, my job as a Life Science teacher at the local middle school was a far cry
from what Gene did for a living. But I was eager to try. "Sure, what
not?" I said, adding quickly before he could say No, "I take orders
well, just ask Chris." Which was true. I may not possess the greatest number
of skills when it comes to practical matters, like fixing a leaky faucet or
replacing a screen on a window, but I was willing to tackle any project. (Then
I'd call Gene.)
"All right," he said,
after considering it, "Who knows, it might be fun."
It was. Working one day a week, we
got the demolished garage debris cleared out and hauled away by the end of
October. Then he had a crew come over and pour the slab. After it cured for a
couple of weeks we started the framing which we finished by New Year's. We had
the siding on in the middle of February, in time for the first day of spring
training. Then we put in a small wood burning stove in the back to heat the
place during the rest of the cold Minnesota winter while we finished the inside.
We usually worked either Saturday or Sunday and it was fun. I even learned to
drive a nail straight. (Gene taught me how to use a nail gun. Piece of cake.)
By the time April and the Twins first regular season game rolled around, we had
the two car plus space complete and were ready for the radio, some beer and
baseball.
All well and good, right? Well, the
thing was, during the time we were doing the construction, a good six months, I
noticed something changing in my friend. He'd always had energy to burn and
could easily out work me. But as the year ended and this new year began, he started
to slow down a little, took more breaks, and just didn't seem to have the pep
he normally had. When I mentioned this to Chris in February she said, "Why
don't you ask him about it?"
Novel idea, and not one guys are
usually comfortable with. But after I hemmed and hawed for a few weeks, trying
to figure out a way to bring it up without it looking like I was prying (and
coming up nothing), I said to myself, to hell with it, I'll just ask him.
Say Gene, how are things going? You feeling Ok
these days?" There, that wasn't so hard, was it?
We were taping in the dry wall. He
kept working, but said to the wall, "Sure. Why?"
"I was just wondering is
all."
"Nope. All is good,
buddy." Then turned and looked past me to the section of wall I was
working on, giving it a critical eye, "Make sure you get that tape sanded
a little smoother, Ed, It looks kind of rough."
So there you go. Everything was Ok.
When I told this to Chris that
evening she gave me an incredulous look and said, "That's all you did?
Just asked him and left it? You didn't push him and ask some more detail. You
know, maybe probe a little," she said, raising her voice and poking me in
the chest with her finger a few times to make her point, "God, Ed, you a
such an idiot."
"What?" I said, a little
defensively, rubbing the spot where she'd poked me, "What else could I
have done?"
"Not let him off the hook,
that's what. Haven't you noticed that he's lost weight, too?"
No, I hadn't. "Not
really."
"Men!" Chris said, and
stomped off, saying over her shoulder, "I'll call BJ. and find out what's
going on."
"No, you don't have to do
that," I said, I hurrying after her. But she did anyway.
Gene had been feeling poorly, is
what BJ told Chris and what Chris relayed to me later that night. "He just
doesn't have much energy," BJ told me.
"Yeah, like I said."
She ignored my comment and
continued, "His doctor's keeping an eye on him. BJ thinks we should just
carry on with Gene like all is well. I guess he doesn't want to make a big deal
of it." She paused and looked at me and then added, "She thanked me for
my concern and for calling her, and told me it was good to talk."
Chris' take charge attitude made me
feel a little defensive, but I let it ride, knowing I was never going to win an
argument with my headstrong wife.
"Sounds good to me," I
said, happy to have avoided a confrontation. Besides, not getting into feelings
was something both Gene and I were good at. So we left it at that.
And that brings me to where we were
now, sitting in the finished garage on an August afternoon, drinking a few
beers and listening to the Twins play Kansas City. I had been a little
surprised by Gene's out-of-the-blue prostitute story but was happy to play
along, more curious than anything as to what happened - you know, what the final
outcome had been. Now this. The reality of the situation was that the
prostitute, Jackie, was really BJ, Gene's wife, and they were happily married
and had been for many years!
Did his telling me the story have
something to do with his illness?
"Ed, there's a little bit more
I need to tell you about," he told me.
Well, I guess I was about to find
out.
He stood up, went to the workbench and fiddled
around with a jar of screws before going to the radio and lowering the volume. Then
walked over to his chair and sat down again. "You might have noticed I
haven't been myself lately." He picked up his beer, swirled it around and
then set it down without taking a swig. He looked at me with the most serious
expression I'd ever seen on him. I waited, now wondering what the hell he was
going to tell me. I have to admit that I myself was struck by a sudden urge to
get up, walk around and fiddle with stuff like he had done, but I didn't. Something
told me what he was going to tell me wasn't going to be good. I stayed right
where I was, took a sip of beer and nervously waited, watching him. Finally he
sighed and took a breath, mustering himself before looking at me and saying,
"Well, the thing is, Eddie, I've got a tumor. It's in my brain. I've got a
friggin' brain tumor."
Shit, I was right. It was bad.
I don't know about Gene, but for me
the world suddenly stood still. For about a minute. I was aware of nothing
except maybe the game on in the background. I don't know. Everything turned
blurry while I tried to process what he'd told me. I do know that the bottom
fell out of my stomach and I felt like I was going to be sick. I needed to do
say or do something. Fast. So I did both.
"What the hell, man?" I
said, standing up and hurrying over next to him. I knelt down so we were eye to
eye. What do you say in a situation like this? I knew nothing about brain
cancer. Could it be treated? Was he going to die in a few weeks or was he going
to be able to live a long and fulfilling life? I had no clue, but I did know
this - my heart went out to the guy. I put my hand on his arm in a show of
solidarity and said, "I'm so sorry, man. Is there anything I can do to
help?"
And he looked at me, his eyes sad
and a little tearful, and said, "I was wondering if maybe you could drive
me to the treatments. It'd be a big help. Jackie's pretty freaked out."
And then, almost as if it was
scripted, his wife's voice came from the entrance to the garage, "I take
it you told him," she said, racing across the floor to us,
"Good." I stood up, my knees a little weak. She looked at me and
said, "He's wanted to tell you for a long time, Eddie. It seemed like now was
as good a time as any."
My first thought was (swear to God)
is she talking about him telling me about her being a former prostitute, or
about his brain tumor? I took a chance on the latter, "Yeah, he just told
me about the tumor." My heart went out to her, too, and I embraced her,
"I'm so sorry."
Gene broke the tension with some
levity, motioning towards himself, "Hey, what about me?" And we both knelt
down and hugged him, which is how Chris found us. BJ had called earlier and
told her to come over. She joined us in a four-way hug fest. I have to say, it
was pretty emotional.
Well, that
was last summer. It's now February , the dead of winter, and Gene is doing
pretty well. His type of cancer is referred to as low grade (diffuse) astrocytoma. The five year survival rate for a
man of his age (forty eight) is 43 % so we are hopeful. Throughout the rest of
the summer and in to the fall I gladly did what he asked of me and took him to the
University of Minnesota Hospital for radiation treatments. He had six of them
and they were spaced far enough apart so he could rest and recover in between. We
completed them in the beginning of December. The next step is surgery, but his lead
doctor (well, doctors. He has a team of them.) is holding off on that. Right
now they're monitoring all kinds of factors relating to Gene's condition, of
which I only understand a little bit and, remember, I'm a science teacher. It's
pretty complicated.
For the rest of the year he got
progressively weaker. The doctors attributed it to the radiation treatments and
it looks like there were correct, because I'm glad to say that around the first
of the year Gene turned the corner and started getting a little stronger. In
fact, he seems to be getting little bit better every day. He's lost maybe thirty
pounds and most of his hair has fallen out. The pony tail is long gone. So is
the beard. At least he's not as weak as he was. I prefer to think of him as not
dying, but getting better, and the weight loss and hair loss is just part of
that process, but then I've always been a glass half full kind of guy. I'm just
not ready to lose him yet, so I'm not planning to. He's the best friend I've ever
had.
Anyway, the point of this story is
really not about dying and death. It's about Gene and his stories. See, the
interesting thing about his form of brain cancer has to do with one of its side
effects. Gene has always been a talkative guy and way more expressive than me. If
he was a good story teller before the brain tumor...well, let me tell you, he's
an amazing story teller now. We've taken to spending one or two evenings a week
together out in the garage with the wood burning stove cranked up. It's deep
winter, so we're listening to the Minnesota Wild hockey games, drinking herbal
tea, which believe me, we are still getting used to, but it's supposed to be
better for him than beer, and I guess neither of us can argue with that.
Anyway, I swear, put a quarter in him these days and he just won't stop
talking. He's telling stories about playing minor league baseball, stories
about hiking both the Appalachian and Pacific Crest trails, stories about
training to ride the Tour de France, stories about when he was a Peace Corp
Volunteer in Sierra Leone, and on and on and on. I asked his doctor about it
and he told me not put too much stock in the stories Gene is telling - that they're
probably not true and just a crazy aspect of how his mind is working and a
unique side effect of the tumor. Like an hallucination. I guess the doctor's
the expert and I'm supposed to believe him. Maybe I should but, hell, whatever
the case, Gene's stories are fun to listen to. Besides, it's great to be with him
and hang out together and listen to him talk. It's just like the old times,
back before the tumor.
But it's gotten me thinking back to
that day when it finally came out that Gene had a brain tumor. He had just told
me about his encounter with the prostitute, Jackie, and how they had talked,
became friends, then lovers, and how it turned out that her name was not Jackie,
but Bobby Jean, BJ, who eventually became his wife, and Jackie was just her
stage name, if you know what I mean. The thing was, was the story real or not?
Or did Gene make the whole thing up?
The logical thing, of course, would
be to ask BJ, but man, that seems like an insane thing to do. I can just
picture that conversation:
"Hey BJ, I have a question for
you?"
"Sure, Eddie, what is it?"
"Gene tells me you guys met
when you were a teenage hooker. Is that true?"
I can just imagine the look on her
face. It wouldn't be pretty. In fact, my guess is that it'd be pretty scary.
Anyway, she's got enough to deal with now taking care of Gene without having to
deal with my idle curiosity. Plus, I really can't think of a good way to broach
the subject without offending her. And, to tell the truth, what good can come
of It? I do know that their story has always been that they met at a bar after
one of his ball games in Davenport, started talking, started dating and the
rest was history. Which, in a way, is close to the truth. The more I've thought
about it, the more I think, who really cares? Gene and BJ are happy together. They've
raised a fine daughter in Samantha and now are dealing with the most
challenging event of their marriage - Gene's brain tumor. I'm going to help out
as much as I can, and be the best friend to him I can possibly be, and leave
the story of her being a prostitute alone. True or not.
Besides, for the last few visits he's
been telling me about playing goalie for the Hamilton Bulldogs, a minor league
affiliate of the Edmonton Oilers. My favorite sport when I was growing up was playing
hockey so to me they're highly entertaining. You see, when Gene was with the
Bulldogs one of the guys on his team was an eighteen year old hockey
phenomenon, the soon to be hockey legend (get this), Wayne Gretzky of all
people! Since I've always liked (well, loved, maybe is a closer word) hockey those
have been some great stories to listen to. But when they run out, I'm
optimistic there will be more. Who knows where his mind will take him? But Gene
is definitely on a roll - it's hockey this and Wayne Gretzky that, and I'm more
than happy to sit there and be with him, spending time together, him telling me
his stories and me listening. Hopefully it's something we'll be doing for a
long, long time, because, I mean, really, what better way is there to help a
friend deal with a crisis like Gene's going through than to hang out and talk
and listen to him tell his stories? None that I can think of.
Besides, when he tells me about being
in the nets playing goalie and stopping the greatest hockey player of all time
on breakaway after breakaway, time after time again, well, hell, I could listen
forever.
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