4
THE BK LOUNGE AND HERSHEY PIE
“I’ll have the Whopper Meal.”
“Would you like to make that
a large?”
“No, a medium is fine.”
“And for you?”
“I’ll have a number 1.”
“Large or medium?”
“Large,”
“Are you sure Nate? That’s a lot of extra fries and you can
already get refills on soda.”
“I want the large,” said
Nathan in his little out of breath voice.
I shrugged but I was annoyed. I didn’t have a lot of money. I was still only working 16 hours a week even
though we’ve been out of high school for 2 weeks. I was buying Nate’s dinner, I told him I’d
take him to weekday evening church thing.
I also promised him the Hershey Pie they serve but in that moment I felt
like he chose the extra fries over the pie.
These little things usually
got me heated, but I wanted to be patient with Nathan. I usually just gave him a second chance to
make a decision, like when I asked him if he was sure he wanted the large. He always stuck to his first choice
though. I always wondered if I could
push him more but at the same time I was out of my league. He needed help and I could only try to be his
friend.
We got our number and filled
our cups with Soda. I got a Dr. Pepper
and Nate got a suicide mix of orange soda, Sprite and Diet Coke before we found
a table to sit at.
“They arrested you right?”
“It wasn’t too bad. They let me go home that night.”
“I called you,” he said. “Why didn’t you call me back?”
“I guess I was busy. Had to deal with a lot of stuff,” I lied. Honestly I just didn’t have the patience for
him after the arrest. I didn’t answer
the phone. He’d call the house phone and
one of my siblings would pick it up. I was too busy playing videogames so
they’d take a message for me.
“You didn’t cross the stage
at your graduation. I didn’t see you
there.”
“Sorry Nate. I should have told you they weren’t going to
let me walk,” I felt like shit. I didn’t
realize he’d go to my graduation.
I canceled my party and one
of the times I heard my sister on the phone tell him it was canceled so I knew
he wouldn’t show up for that. I didn’t
realize he would bike all the way downtown just to see me walk across the stage.
Get a diploma holder, shake the hand of the principal and walk off stage. All while we pretend to be excited because
they told us the diplomas gets mailed out two weeks later. An important part of American life cheapened.
I really didn’t have a whole
lot to say to him. I was just trying to
be there I guess but my heart wasn’t in it.
We sat in silence mostly. The
food came and we ate our sandwiches.
“So do you have to come back
to school then in the fall?”
“No. I have all the credits to graduate. They can’t make me take any more
classes. They expelled me but school was
already out, forever. So I’m not sure
what it all means.”
I hadn’t visited the district
office yet about getting my diploma. It
didn’t bother me one way or the other personally. I think my dad telling me to take care of it
and my lack of responsibility on handling my own shit was the only thing that
did bother me. All I really wanted to do
was play video games.
“I think I’m going to go out
for theatre like you did. You said it
was fun.”
“Yeah, I enjoyed it,” then
taking a sip of my soda. “You don’t have
to go out for it. There’s no
tryouts. You just show up and help out
where you can.”
“You said you liked the peace
and quiet up there, high over the stage.”
“The catwalk.”
“Yeah,” he gave one of his out
of breath chuckles. “The Catwalk,” he
cried loudly making me look around but there was only one other patron in the
BK lounge. “You said you liked it up
there. It was dark and quiet, and you
liked it, and you liked to go up there to think.”
“Yeah,” I replied dunking a
fry in the ketchup. I did enjoy
theatre. I did the fly system. Usually two or three kids would be on the
catwalk doing it but I got pretty good at it.
I liked doing it by myself. The
fly system was on the first level of catwalks and it had a railing.
There was another catwalk
with no railings. Just runs of walks 50
feet above the stage with two-foot gaps between each walk you could fall
through to the stage below. I didn’t like
heights so I’d sit up there between fly queues and just let my feet dangle off
the side of the catwalk. I wanted to
push my fear of heights. The height
would make me nervous but eventually my thoughts would just take over and I’d
think up there in the quiet. You could
only hear the actors during rehearsals and no one usually came up there and
bothered me. There was also a door up
there that led to the roof of the school.
Which I would use during pep rallies.
I’d make my way across the catwalk, out the door and onto the roof. Then there’d be a series of ladders mounted
into the side of the school I could climb down and make it to the parking lot
undetected. School pep rallies were
mandatory. Two many students in the gym
to take roll but security would lock doors and guard exits to keep students
inside. They didn’t bother with the roof
access above the theatre though.
“Remember when you took me up
there?”
“Yeah, just the fly system
though. We never went up to the catwalk
above the stage.”
“I want to do the fly. I’d like to go up to the catwalk.”
“It’s pretty high up.”
“You never let me up there.”
I never let him up
there. I’d let him hang with me by the
fly system. I even let him fly smaller
pieces of scenery a couple times under my close supervision. But up on the catwalk I didn’t want the
responsibility for him. He had a sense
of fearlessness that scared me sometimes.
I moved pretty slow and with purpose up there. I didn’t want to have to chase him around 50
feet above the stage if he got overexcited.
“Maybe I can get permission
and the teacher will let me do the fly.”
“Maybe,” I replied but I
didn’t have much faith in that happening.
The theatre teacher would honestly run Nate out of the theatre anyway,
not wanting to be responsible. “They’ll
probably start you off as a stagehand.
Putting on all blacks, hiding in the shadows and placing props and set
pieces between scenes.”
“When will I get to work with
the fly?”
“I don’t know.”
“What’s tonight’s sermon
about?”
“I don’t know.”
“What are you going to do
this fall?”
“I don’t know.”
My patience was short and I
felt bad. I just wasn’t in the
mood. He asked a lot of questions,
mostly asking “why”. I just wanted to get
him to the church event where hopefully the worship portion I can relax from
answering questions. But this was being
Nathan’s friend. It came with questions
about everything and followed by why everything was the way it was. After the sermon I knew he would then ask me
questions about the sermon. These were
the most challenging of all. I didn’t
have those answers. I usually just had
more questions like any other 18 year old would. It was an exhausting relationship, but I
tried.
It was finally time to go to
the weeknight church service and he wasn’t done with his fries. He brought them along.
“Lets get our Hershey Pies to
go.”