Talking About Things Thursday afternoon. The doorbell rings, and my wife, Joan, greets Gayle and her son, Brad. Gayle is petite and has a toothpaste ad smile; Brad, a young teen, is gangly, his head hanging down. I glance over, say “Hi” and continue working at the kitchen table, my head also going down into the "too busy to talk" position. But I can’t help overhearing their conversation. "Brad has a new jacket. He likes blue. Don't you think he looks great!" "Oh, yeah, very nice,” Joan replies. "He got it for the dance. He has a date with Jenny's daughter, Teri. She's cute as a button." "I know her. I think she's an honors student," replies Joan. "Brad, too. He wants to be a biologist." Brad is examining the carpet as if he indeed loves biology and sees hundreds of interesting critters crawling about. "What about it, Brad," I say. "Biology is your thing?" "Oh, I donno." I kick myself—why did I keep him on the hot spot? It's 1952. My mother is telling Aunt Laura that I want to be a doctor, that girls are beginning to notice me, that I got the best newspaper delivery boy award. Aunt Laura says, "Yes, he's such a good looking boy; he has your eyes." I do my best to become invisible, not easy when two Italian women are rolling your psyche back and forth like a bocce ball. Back in the present, Gayle is saying " He's especially into insects. You should see his collection." I entertain the idea of interjecting with, "Gayle, why don't you let Brad speak for himself," but don’t. houseflies buzzing-- published in Contemporary Haibun |