The winner of Boston Reviews seventeenth annual short story contest
This tale features the intensity and compression that make good short stories so memorable, as well as some wonderfully taut and gripping prose. Heres a heady, dark flash on the wounded human heart. —Chang-rae Lee
You could say the trouble started a couple weeks ago in art class, or you could say it started long before that, back when Kyles teeth started coming in crooked, when his chin buckled under his jaw and ceased to grow, when they first noticed his crossed eyes, when the neighbors freckled son first called him those names that made his throat close up, planted that seed in his mind that grew and made him cower from the world and especially other children.
He could feel that he didnt look quite right, that he didnt act quite right, that his clothes didnt fit, sagged over his skinny shoulders and curved spine. Hed look in the bathroom mirror and see it. Even when they werent calling him names he knew that if they caught a good look at him theyd start in, so he kept his eyes down, bent his face away toward something on the ground or the wall, pretending to be absorbed by a poster or a book. Afraid to show his teeth, he would cover his mouth with his hand as he turned the pages and pray that no one noticed him. Sometimes he was sure he could hear his name being whispered behind his back. Sometimes hed think he was only imagining it, but then hed feel something hard or something wet or something sharp smack against his skin and hed twist around and bat his arm in the air. Like a gerbil doing a trick. Theyd laugh harder each time.
It had been like that forever, and Kyle could have endured it for one more year until high school, where there would be more kids, more distractions; it would be easier. But then in art class, he let his guard down. On his way back to his desk from the pencil sharpener in the corner, he bumped Joeys desk. Yellow acrylic paint spilled onto the crotch of Kyles corduroys. Joey had been painting a lion under a tree, with a drip of blood on its whiskers and a pile of red flesh its feet. He looked up, locked eyes with Kyle, saw the fear, saw the stammering, slack jaw. Kyle took a step back, waving his wrists in front of him, a clumsy apology, but it was too late. Spit sprayed from Joeys lips, and he pointed at Kyles crotch. Look, everyone, the freak pissed his pants, he howled, and the room howled with him. What happened next was strange and cruel, if an accident can be something like cruel. Kyle really did wet himself beneath the yellow paint.
The principal explained to Kyles mother what had happened while Kyle sat in the waiting room in his gym sweatpants with his corduroys in a plastic bag at his feet. He covered his mouth and turned his head away, staring at the knick-knacks on the secretarys desk, careful not to let the gawkers in the hall see his face. Pissed his pants, pissed his pants, they whispered. They scattered when his mother and the principal finally came out.
Kyle was taken out of that art class and switched to music. The teachers were on the lookout, but the children were cunning. The teachers didnt see them spray Kyles locker with ketchup, spelling the word freak on the door. They didnt see the boys piss into a water bottle in the bathroom and pour it into Kyles open backpack while it sat on the floor in homeroom. Joey orchestrated the whole thing, whispering in the other boys ears, pointing, sneering, making sure Kyle could see them. The word, freak, was murmured constantly in the halls when he passed. He looked away, pretended not to notice. Joey spit down Kyles shirt and flicked his ears on the bus, leaning in close and whispering that word over and over, so often that it took on a new meaning, so often that Kyle believed it because it was the only explanation. When he got home he went straight to the bathroom, gripped the sides of the sink, and watched himself cry in the mirror.
His mother got him to open the bathroom door, helped him wash his face, sat him on the couch, and gently rubbed his back. He caught his breath and told her he didnt want to go back to school anymore. You cant run from your fears, she said. I should just beat the shit out of him. Violence doesnt solve anything. You know that, Kyle. You just need to talk to him, like an adult, ask him to stop. Hell listen. He wont listen. He will. Just talk to him.
On the bus on Friday morning Kyle scribbled a note in his notebookJoey, can we talk please? When Joey got on the bus and walked past him down the aisle, Kyle held it out for him and he took it, walked back a few rows and sat with his friends. Kyle turned toward the window, covering his mouth, straining to hear. He heard the unfolding of paper, a lot of whispers, but no laughter. When they reached the school and filed off onto the sidewalk, Joey handed Kyle a response. He stuck it into his pocket and didnt read it until homeroom. It said, Meet me at bathroom before lunch.
That morning he rehearsed in his mind, repeating words and phrases over and over until they sounded right. Please . . .
discuss this like adults . . . what did I do to you? . . . not fair
. . . yourself in my shoes. His leg shook as he covered his mouth and watched the clock on the wall.
After fourth period, before lunch, he went to the boys bathroom, and Joey was standing outside the door, waiting.
What do you want?
I want to talk.
About what?
Why are you picking on me?
Because youre a freak. Look at you. Look at your fucking teeth. Your glasses. Youre disgusting.
Listen, I just want to talk, like adults, about this.
What, are you going to cry now? Are you crying?
Im not crying.
You are! Youre such a fucking little wimp, you cant even talk now, can you?
If you dont stop, Im gonna . . .
Youre gonna what? Kick my ass? Right! Youre going to piss your pants again, you fucking freak!
When the tears really started to come, the other boys rushed out of the bathroom, cackling. One sprayed more piss from a plastic bottle onto Kyles pants and another snapped a picture of Kyle, bawling, teeth protruding, pants wet.
Kyle?
Hi, Dad.
Hit him in the nose first.
What?
What a fucking little monster. Im going to call his mother, she said. No mom, you cant do that, he sobbed, that will only make it worse. What about the principal? I can call the principal. We can have a conference. No, you dont understand. She looked away and clenched her jaw. What the hell can we do then? She rubbed her forehead, thinking hard. He was crying, trembling on the couch, wrapped in a blanket, hair still wet from the shower. She rubbed his back, pulled him close, feeling to blame for everything.
She went into the other room and called Kyles older brother, at college upstate, talked to him for a long time. He heard the sounds of arguing. No, no, no. He cant. There must be another way. She came back into the room and sat down, put her hand on his back. He could feel her looking at his buckteeth, his crossed eyes, her heart aching. He said you have to beat him up, Kyle. He said thats the only way. He said that everyone has to do it, sooner or later. He had to do it when he was your age, and then afterwards, things were better. Kyle stared at the floor, nodding, and she pulled him close again, apologizing.
Suddenly she got up and decided to call Kyles father. Kyle tried to hear what was said in hushed tones in the other room. There was some yelling. Maybe if he had a father around, she said. After a while she came into the room, her hair tousled, her eyes exhausted. Your father wants to talk to you, she said, holding out the receiver.
Kyle?
Hi, Dad.
Hit him in the nose first.
What?
It hurts like hell to get hit in the nose. Hit him in the nose first, and then keep on hitting him. Dont stop until he goes down.
That night Kyle stayed up watching Bruce Willis chase bad guys through the streets, gun in hand. He wore a tight white T-shirt, his muscles bulging. When he caught the bad guys, he threw them up against brick walls, threw punches and kicks. They connected with a popping, slapping sound, the bad guys flew and landed in piles of black garbage bags. Kyles heart raced and sent a warm, stinging sensation down into his hands. He clenched his fists hard, until they turned white and trembled. Then the nausea started.
Saturday he went into the woods behind his house with his hunting knife, a gift from his older brother. He picked a tree and taunted it, called it Joey, practiced pulling the knife out of its sheath, waving it in front of him, lunging at the tree, stabbing it in the side, in the front, slicing it across. His lips curled over his teeth, he bit down hard, growling, stabbing fast and hard in the same spot until the bark chipped away. A car pulled into his neighbors driveway, so he hid the knife and paced around the tree, face to the ground, kicking dried leaves. He looked at the divot on the tree, at the clean whiteness underneath, the translucent sap beginning to seep out.
On Sunday morning his stomach still ached. His mother was silent and watchful, finding something to clean or rearrange wherever he went. She tried to get him to eat. She asked him once, only once, midday, if he was going to do it tomorrow, and he nodded his head. He sat on the couch, looking out the window at the cars driving by, wishing with every breath to be any one of those other people. On TV he saw more people fighting, punching, kicking. It seemed impossible. His mind wandered, lost, exhausted, until suddenly his whole body clenched and he threw a punch furiously in the air. Startled, he looked around to make sure his mother didnt see.
He waited until he was on the bus, then he waited until he saw Joey pass down the aisle. He waited until they were at the school, and then he waited until first period. There were no whispers or taunts or laughter. It was as if they had all forgotten. After second period, on the way to his locker, he saw Joey and walked straight toward him, his heart racing, his hands on fire. Then, the sickness, and he ducked into the bathroom, catching his breath in the stall.
After fourth period, he decided, before lunch. Please God, he said to himself, just get it over with.
Third period came, and then fourth, the bile rising in his stomach with every tick of the clock, and then it was time.
He went to his locker first, to do something, anything until Joey came. He opened it and saw, tacked on the inside of the door, the photo: his face contorted and red, in pain and misery, bawling like a baby, his unfortunate teeth sticking out, his crotch wet with someone elses urine.
He hit him in the nose first, like his father had said. Joeys head snapped back into the locker, and Kyle kept going. He used only his right hand, over and over, all towards the nose, like a machine, and he felt something crack. So this is what its like, he thought. The buzzing in his ears, the tingling in his handsnot like the movies at all. So much faster, so far away, like a dream. Joey bent down and put up his hands but Kyle maneuvered around them, catching him in the chin, the head, the ear. He kept going. He had never touched a person like this before, felt their body, their weight, their density. Joeys face felt wet and soon Kyles hand did too. He began to say things as he did it, using words he had never said before, explaining to Joey what was happening, showing him what was inside him, then asking if he understood. He wanted to be clear. He had never felt such strength, like he could do it forever, so simple, back and forth, over and over, with everything he was.
Someone from behind pulled him off, held his arms back tightly. He realized then that a crowd had formed, that the buzzing in his ears was the cheers of the other kids. They were watching and cheering for him. He looked down at Joey, kneeling there on the ground, touching his hands to his face and looking at them. The wetness was blood, and it was dripping from Joeys face onto the porcelain floor into round, dark blots, almost as black as night. Kyle realized thenwe really are all full of blood. But Joey wasnt crying. In fact, he looked calm, almost pleased, like he didnt feel a thing. He looked up at Kyle and said the word again. Freak. Kyle broke free, lunged forward, and tried to explain some more something that Joey didnt understand.
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Adam Sturtevants fiction has appeared in decomP, Two Hawks Quarterly, Santa Fe Writers Project, and Evening Street Review.
Recent fiction contest winners:
Jessica Treglia, Canceled
Patricia Engel, Desaliento
that tissue
full of desires
and beautiful
thoughts, a
little voyage
while everything
shines recalling
the youth....
Francesco Sinibaldi
This is a cool story, Adam Sturtevant. Don't pay attention to the guys who are upset because they didn't win. You took an old idea and breathed life into it. Nice going.
Yet the pain continues, and no true solution is put forward---largely because (in my opinion, anyway) no solution is possible. Here is a memorable slice of realia.
i enjoyed some of the dialogue, especially the run- on style between Kyle and his mother. its very staccato and refreshing.
Over all not bad, could be a little better.
Cheers!
This is an almost universal story. Everyone has to make something of themselves in middle school, or they won't survive. I decked my two antagonists to the pavement after the bus dropped us off. Then I ran away. This allowed us all to save some face.
The problem for many young boys is that they're taught the "civilized" way of dealing with problems when they're living in a jungle. The contrast between the cruelty Kyle has to put up with and his mother's disconnected inability to understand what's going on or how to solve it is a solid illustration of how far apart the adult world and the world of the child truly are.
Great work Adam. This was very well-written and it flowed very naturally. Towards the end of the story, it also produces an anxiety in the reader, we feel what Kyle was feeling right before doing what he did.
You can never please everybody. ;)
I was one with Kyle in that last scene and for what it's worth, yes, it's true violence isn't always the answer but you're joking with life if you never take a stand and get ready to die for it.
Well done, Mr Sturtevant. Bloody good show.
Education, like youth, is wasted on the young.
This is more sharply observed than my reality. Bravo!
It makes me think of Dale Carnegie, or even of war or torture. You can't bludgeon someone into seeing things your way.
If that's true, why do we see things the way we do? What is influencing us to be lazy or evil or any way that we consciously think we do not want to be?
How does culture or our neurons, or the devil act on us?
Again, bravo!
This part gripped me and really set the voice. Great job.
As I didn't read any of the other entries I'm not sure of this story's prize winning worthiness, but it certainly reads like a typical effort, that is, it is riff with clutter, but well written none the less.