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    Frenchtown Summer Frenchtown Summer

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      That summer,

      Frenchtown was a place

      of Sahara afternoons,

      shadows in doorways,

      lingering evenings,

      full of unanswered questions

      and mysteries.

      It was also the summer

      of my twelfth birthday,

      the summer

      of Sister Angela

      and Marielle LeMoyne

      (even though she was dead)

      and my brother, Raymond,

      and all the others,

      but especially my uncle Med

      and my father.

      And finally

      it was the summer

      of the airplane.

      Other books

      by Robert Cormier

      After the First Death

      Beyond the Chocolate War

      The Bumblebee Flies Anyway

      The Chocolate War

      Eight Plus One

      Fade

      Heroes

      I Am the Cheese

      I Have Words to Spend

      In the Middle of the Night

      A Little Raw on Monday Mornings

      Now and at the Hour

      Other Bells for Us to Ring

      The Rag and Bone Shop

      Take Me Where the Good Times Are

      Tenderness

      Tunes for Bears to Dance To

      We All Fall Down

      To Bobbie, Peter, Chris and Renée

      With Love, Dad

      That summer in Frenchtown

      in the days

      when I knew my name

      but did not know who I was,

      we lived on the second floor

      of the three-decker on Fourth Street.

      From the piazza late in the afternoon

      I watched for my father,

      waiting for him to come home

      from the Monument Comb Shop.

      No matter how tired he was,

      his step was quick.

      He'd always look up, expecting to see me,

      and that's why I was there,

      not wanting to disappoint him

      or myself.

      That was the summer of my first paper route,

      and I walked the tenement canyons

      of Frenchtown

      delivering The Monument Times,

      dodging bullies and dogs,

      wondering what I was doing

      here on the planet Earth,

      not knowing yet that the deep emptiness

      inside me

      was

      loneliness.

      I felt like a ghost

      on Mechanic Street,

      transparent as rain,

      until the growling of Mr. Mellier's dog

      restored my flesh and blood

      and hurried me on my way.

      I was always glad to arrive home,

      where my mother,

      who looked like a movie star,

      welcomed me with a kiss and a hug.

      My mother filled the tenement with smells,

      cakes in the oven,

      hot donuts in bubbling oil,

      and hamburg laced with onions sizzling

      in the black pan she called the Spider.

      She loved books, lilac cologne,

      and me.

      My mother was vibrant,

      a wind chime,

      but my father was a silhouette,

      as if obscured

      by a light shining behind him.

      He was closer to me waving from the street

      than nearby in the tenement

      or walking beside me.

      On summer Saturdays,

      the men gathered

      at the Happy Times bar

      or in Rouleau's Barber Shop

      and talked about the Boston Red Sox

      and the prospects of a layoff

      at the Monument Comb Shop

      while my brother, Raymond,

      swapped baseball cards

      in Pee Alley

      with his best friend, Alyre Tournier.

      I stood beside my father

      as he listened

      to what the men were saying,

      smoking his Chesterfields,

      and I wished I could be like him,

      mysterious,

      silent.

      I was not famous in the schoolyard, or on the street corners, content to cheer for Raymond,

      who was a star at everything,

      baseball at Carder's Field,

      Buck Buck How Many Fingers Up?

      in the schoolyard,

      while I read

      The Adventures of Tom Sawyer

      or A Study in Scarlet

      on the piazza,

      avoiding the possibility

      of dropping a fly ball in center field.

      My paper route took me

      from the green three-decker

      next to the Boston & Maine railroad tracks

      where downtown Monument

      met Frenchtown,

      along Mechanic

      and all the numbered streets

      from First to Twelfth.

      My last customer was Mr. Lottier

      at the end of Mechanic Street

      next to the sewer beds.

      I held my nose

      as I tossed the paper to his piazza.

      He always smiled

      when he paid me on Friday,

      as if his nose didn't work.

      That summer, Frenchtown was a place of Sahara afternoons, shadows in doorways, lingering evenings, full of unanswered questions and mysteries.

      It was also the summer of my twelfth birthday, the summer of Sister Angela and Marielle LeMoyne (even though she was dead) And my brother, Raymond, and all the others,

      but especially my uncle Med

      and my father.

      And finally

      it was the summer

      of the airplane.

      How many times I have heard

      the men at the Happy Times

      talking about the famous dancer

      in a London dressing room

      who decided,

      on a whim,

      to cut off her tumbling locks

      of auburn hair,

      plunging Frenchtown

      into a depression

      a year later because

      women all over the world

      adopted her bobbed hairstyle

      and did not require anymore

      the fancy combs

      and barrettes,

      glittering with rhinestones,

      dancing with sequins,

      that paraded from the assembly lines

      of the Frenchtown comb shops.

      My father didn't work for a year.

      Just a child then,

      too young to understand

      what was happening,

      I only knew that my mother

      did not smile anymore,

      her voice like one long sad note

      struck on a piano

      when she read me stories,

      while my father seemed to have gone away

      even though I could see him clearly

      in his kitchen chair by the window,

      the silence in the tenement

      a terrible noise

      in my heart.

      Moosock Brook

      kept disappearing

      as it flowed

      through downtown Monument

      and later Frenchtown,

      red, purple or green,

      depending on the dyes

      dumped that day by the comb shops.

      The brook slid

      under Main Street

      and reappeared

      on Water Street,

      colors hectic in the sunlight,


      until it went unseen again

      beneath the B&M railroad bridge,

      before finally flowing

      into the Meadows.

      There it created

      a sudden pool

      into which Frenchtown kids,

      Raymond among them,

      plunged with glorious abandon,

      emerging later,

      dripping

      red, purple or green

      depending on the dyes

      dumped that day

      by the shops.

      I wore my aviator helmet,

      the goggles pushed up

      on my head

      in careless fashion,

      striding through the streets

      like a World War hero

      home after aerial battles

      over the trenches in France

      until Hector Henault

      tore the helmet from my head,

      dashed it to the ground

      and crushed the goggles

      under his boots,

      the sound

      like my own bones cracking.

      He paused to view his damage.

      Holding the ruined goggles

      in hands that trembled,

      I withheld tears

      as I screamed at him:

      “Die, you dirty rat, die,”

      (but silently, of course)

      like James Cagney

      in the movies.

      Three days later,

      Hector Henault was crushed

      like my goggles

      under the wheels of a Mack truck

      on Mechanic Street

      near Fifth.

      They said he died instantly.

      I was awestruck

      by my power to kill.

      On the fourth of July,

      Oliver Randeau,

      giggling,

      lobbed a firecracker my way.

      It exploded like a grenade

      against my ear,

      stunning my skull with pain.

      Knowing the power I possessed,

      I ignored the mad doorbells

      ringing in my head

      and looked at him.

      Because he was stupid,

      still in the sixth grade

      at the age of fourteen,

      with a left eye that often

      went askew,

      I decided

      not to kill him.

      Whenever I met him later,

      on the sidewalks or in the empty lots,

      I deflected his baleful stare

      with a pitying smile.

      Frowning, he always looked away.

      Did he somehow know

      that I held the power

      of life and death over him?

      I wondered whether I should confess this power of mine to Father Balthazar but instead vowed never to use it again even if absolutely necessary.

      My father

      often sat in the shadows

      in the middle of the night,

      The Monument Times

      collapsed in his lap,

      the dial on the Emerson radio

      an orange moon in the dark,

      the volume turned down.

      As I crept by on my way

      to the bathroom,

      having been awakened

      by a dream or a noise,

      he looked up,

      squinting,

      then took his eyes away

      from me.

      I tried to speak, but no words

      my voice drugged with sleep,

      and he continued to stare

      at nothing

      while I glided like a ghost

      to the bedroom,

      my bathroom urge

      forgotten.

      Back in bed,

      smelling the drifting smoke of my father's cigarette, I thought of him sitting up like a sentry in the night, guarding his family.

      Yes but

      why had he looked at me

      as if I were a stranger unknown to him, in the kitchen of the tenement that was home?

      I pretended

      that my tears

      were drops of sweat

      because

      the night was hot.

      The Boston & Maine freight yards

      drew Raymond and Paul Roget and me

      across the iron bands of the tracks

      to the boxcars.

      We'd climb up,

      then race along the roofs,

      leaping from car to car

      in breathtaking swoops,

      pretending railroad bulls

      (that's what they called them

      in the movies at the Plymouth)

      were chasing us,

      blowing their whistles

      and waving their billy clubs.

      We'd take refuge in an empty car,

      inhaling the aroma of faraway places

      … Chicago … Omaha … Santa Fe…

      dangling our feet at the door

      like hoboes

      riding the rails.

      Our parents always reminded us

      of Harold Donay,

      who ran away from home

      to ride the rails

      and, one rainy night,

      outside of Denver, Colorado,

      slipped and fell

      between the boxcars

      and was sliced in half

      by the wheels.

      He was shipped home

      in two parts,

      people said,

      and old Mr. Cardeaux,

      the undertaker,

      stitched him back together again

      for the wake and funeral.

      But we still stole across the tracks

      and climbed the boxcars,

      and outran the bulls …

      although for a long time

      I left the tenement

      whenever my mother

      picked up her needle and thread

      to do her sewing.

      My mother was Irish,

      from a small town in Vermont,

      her eyes the color of bruises,

      her hair black

      as the velvet on which

      diamonds were displayed

      in the windows of Brunelie's Jewelry Store.

      Delicate as lace,

      she was not like my sturdy aunts,

      who stomped off to the comb shops

      in the mornings,

      or the vigorous aunts,

      who stayed home with the babies,

      scrubbing, ironing,

      pummeling carpets on clotheslines.

      Their hands swooped like trapezes

      as they talked,

      to help my mother understand

      their Canuck words,

      while my mother's hands

      performed ballets.

      Somehow they came to understand

      each other

      in a haphazard litany of language.

      From magazines,

      my mother scissored scenes

      of country lanes,

      farmhouses with smoke corkscrewing

      from chimneys,

      while her kitchen window

      framed three-deckers,

      streetlights and sidewalks,

      and the comb shop roofs.

      If her smile was sometimes wistful,

      her laughter often ran silver

      in the tenement.

      She sighed at Raymond's roguish ways

      as she caressed his cheek

      and looked tenderly at me

      in all my confusion.

      Her eyes always lingered

      on my father,

      in what seemed to me

      depths of love.

      At those moments,

      I looked at my father,

      trying to read his eyes,

      to find out

      what was in his heart.

      But he was as unknowable

      as a foreign language.

      In the massive heat

      of a July afternoon,

      delivering the Times


      on Seventh Street,

      I glanced up to see Mrs. Cartin

      on her third-floor piazza,

      hanging clothes on the line

      that stretched like a limp rosary

      from her three-decker

      to the LeBlanc house next door.

      Letting a blue shirt flutter

      like a wounded bird

      to the ground below,

      she leaned forward,

      her hands gripping the railing,

      and rose as if on tiptoe,

      lifting herself,

      rising, rising,

      higher and higher,

      precariously poised,

      like a bird before flight

      —but people can't fly—

      the throbbing in my throat

      preventing me from calling:

      “Don't jump, don't jump!”

      She fell back from the railing,

      like a balloon deflated.

      As she turned away,

      arms hugging her chest,

      I saw tears on her cheeks

      but told myself that

      at that distance

      they were tricks of summer sunlight

      or my imagination.

      That Sunday,

      at the nine o'clock Mass,

      she knelt in the third pew

      alongside Mr. Cartin

      and their two little girls.

      She received Holy Communion,

      eyes lowered

      as she returned from the rail,

      looking like a saint

      in my prayer book.

      I thought of how she had almost

      followed that blue shirt

      in its flight

      to the yard below,

      and placed the memory

      in that dark place

      where I kept all the secrets

      of Frenchtown.

      Long ago,

      before I was born,

      the broken body

      of Marielle LeMoync

      was found in the woods

      at the bottom of Twelfth Street,

      a wild place

      of gnarled bushes

      and stunted trees,

      with a tortured path carving a shortcut

      to the Acme Button Company

      where Marielle worked

      as a packer.

      A yellow necktie

      with black stripes

      coiled like a snake

      around her neck.

      Children were warned

      to stay away from those woods

      but we often explored

      that forbidden territory,

      shivering with delicious fear,

      trying to determine the exact spot

      where she was murdered.

      Her killer was never found

      although a hobo was spied

      leaping aboard a boxcar

      headed west

      the morning her body was discovered.

      Marielle was buried

      in St. Jude's Cemetery,

      a marble angel

      placed on her grave

      by her father and mother,

      who returned to Canada

      the following summer

     
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