The longest day of my lifeย began tardily. I woke up late, took too long in the shower, and ended up having to enjoy my breakfast in the passenger seat of my momโs minivan at 7:17 that Wednesday morning.
I usually got a ride to school with my best friend, Ben Starling, but Ben had gone to school on time, making him useless to me. โOn timeโ for us was thirty minutes before school actually started, because the half hour before the first bell was the highlight of our social calendars: standing outside the side door that led into the band room and just talking. Most of my friends were in band, and most of my free time during school was spent within twenty feet of the band room. But I was not in the band, because I suffer from the kind of tone deafness that is generally associated with actual deafness. I was going to be twenty minutes late, which technically meant that Iโd still be ten minutes early for school itself.
As she drove, Mom was asking me about classes and finals and prom.
โI donโt believe in prom,โ I reminded her as she rounded a corner. I expertly angled my raisin bran to accommodate the g-forces. Iโd done this before.
โWell, thereโs no harm in just going with a friend. Iโm sure you could ask Cassie Hiney.โ And Iย couldย have asked Cassie Hiney, who was actually perfectly nice and pleasant and cute, despite having a fantastically unfortunate last name.
โItโs not just that I donโt like prom. I also donโt like people who like prom,โ I explained, although this was, in point of fact, untrue. Ben was absolutely gaga over the idea of going.
Mom turned into school, and I held the mostly empty bowl with both hands as we drove over a speed bump. I glanced over at the senior parking lot. Margo Roth Spiegelmanโs silver Honda was parked in its usual spot. Mom pulled the minivan into a cul-de-sac outside the band room and kissed me on the cheek. I could see Ben and my other friends standing in a semicircle.
I walked up to them, and the half circle effortlessly expanded to include me. They were talking about my ex-girlfriend Suzie Chung, who played cello and was apparently creating quite a stir by dating a baseball player named Taddy Mac. Whether this was his given name, I did not know. But at any rate, Suzie had decided to go to prom with Taddy Mac. Another casualty.
โBro,โ said Ben, standing across from me. He nodded his head and turned around. I followed him out of the circle and through the door. A small, olive-skinned creature who had hit puberty but never hit it very hard, Ben had been my best friend since fifth grade, when we both finally owned up to the fact that neither of us was likely to attract anyone else as a best friend. Plus, he tried hard, and I liked thatโmost of the time.
โHow ya doinโ?โ I asked. We were safely inside, everyone elseโs conversations making ours inaudible.
โRadar is going to prom,โ he said morosely. Radar was our other best friend. We called him Radar because he looked like a little bespectacled guy called Radar on this old TV showย M*A*S*H, except 1. The TV Radar wasnโt black, and 2. At some point after the nicknaming, our Radar grew about six inches and started wearing contacts, so I suppose that 3. He actually didnโt look like the guy onย M*A*S*Hย at all, but 4. With three and a half weeks left of high school, we werenโt very well going to renickname him.
โThat girl Angela?โ I asked. Radar never told us anything about his love life, but this did not dissuade us from frequent speculation.
Ben nodded, and then said, โYou know my big plan to ask a freshbunny to prom because theyโre the only girls who donโt know the Bloody Ben story?โ I nodded.
โWell,โ Ben said, โthis morning some darling little ninth-grade honeybunny came up to me and asked me if I was Bloody Ben, and I began to explain that it was a kidney infection, and she giggled and ran away. So thatโs out.โ
In tenth grade, Ben was hospitalized for a kidney infection, but Becca Arrington, Margoโs best friend, started a rumor that the real reason he had blood in his urine was due to chronic masturbation. Despite its medical implausibility, this story had haunted Ben ever since. โThat sucks,โ I said.
Ben started outlining plans for finding a date, but I was only half listening, because through the thickening mass of humanity crowding the hallway, I could see Margo Roth Spiegelman. She was next to her locker, standing beside her boyfriend, Jase. She wore a white skirt to her knees and a blue print top. I could see her collarbone. She was laughing at something hystericalโher shoulders bent forward, her big eyes crinkling at their corners, her mouth open wide. But it didnโt seem to be anything Jase had said, because she was looking away from him, across the hallway to a bank of lockers. I followed her eyes and saw Becca Arrington draped all over some baseball player like she was an ornament and he a Christmas tree. I smiled at Margo, even though I knew she couldnโt see me.
โBro, you should just hit that. Forget about Jase. God, that is one candy-coated honeybunny.โ As we walked, I kept taking glances at her through the crowd, quick snapshots: a photographic series entitledย Perfection Stands Still While Mortals Walk Past.ย As I got closer, I thought maybe she wasnโt laughing after all. Maybe sheโd received a surprise or a gift or something. She couldnโt seem to close her mouth.
โYeah,โ I said to Ben, still not listening, still trying to see as much of her as I could without being too obvious. It wasnโt even that she was so pretty. She was just so awesome, and in the literal sense. And then we were too far past her, too many people walking between her and me, and I never even got close enough to hear her speak or understand whatever the hilarious surprise had been. Ben shook his head, because he had seen me see her a thousand times, and he was used to it.
โHonestly, sheโs hot, but sheโs notย thatย hot. You know whoโs seriously hot?โ
โWho?โ I asked.
โLacey,โ he said, who was Margoโs other best friend. โAlso your mom. Bro, I saw your mom kiss you on the cheek this morning, and forgive me, but I swear to God I was like,ย man, I wish I was Q.And also, I wish my cheeks had penises.โ I elbowed him in the ribs, but I was still thinking about Margo, because she was the only legend who lived next door to me. Margo Roth Spiegelman, whose six-syllable name was often spoken in its entirety with a kind of quiet reverence. Margo Roth Spiegelman, whose stories of epic adventures would blow through school like a summer storm: an old guy living in a broken-down house in Hot Coffee, Mississippi, taught Margo how to play the guitar. Margo Roth Spiegelman, who spent three days traveling with the circusโthey thought she had potential on the trapeze. Margo Roth Spiegelman, who drank a cup of herbal tea with the Mallionaires backstage after a concert in St. Louis while they drank whiskey. Margo Roth Spiegelman, who got into that concert by telling the bouncer she was the bassistโs girlfriend, and didnโt they recognize her, and come on guys seriously, my name is Margo Roth Spiegelman and if you go back there and ask the bassist to take one look at me, he will tell you that I either am his girlfriend or he wishes I was, and then the bouncer did so, and then the bassist said โyeah thatโs my girlfriend let her in the show,โ and then later the bassist wanted to hook up with her and sheย rejected the bassist from the Mallionaires.
The stories, when they were shared, inevitably ended with,ย I mean, can you believe it?ย We often could not, but they always proved true.
And then we were at our lockers. Radar was leaning against Benโs locker, typing into a handheld device.
โSo youโre going to prom,โ I said to him. He looked up, and then looked back down.
โIโm de-vandalizing the Omnictionary article about a former prime minister of France. Last night someone deleted the entire entry and then replaced it with the sentence โJacques Chirac is a gay,โ which as it happens is incorrect both factually and grammatically.โ Radar is a big-time editor of this online user-created reference source called Omnictionary. His whole life is devoted to the maintenance and well-being of Omnictionary. This was but one of several reasons why his having a prom date was somewhat surprising.
โSo youโre going to prom,โ I repeated.
โSorry,โ he said without looking up. It was a well-known fact that I was opposed to prom. Absolutely nothing about any of it appealed to meโnot slow dancing, not fast dancing, not the dresses, and definitely not the rented tuxedo. Renting a tuxedo seemed to me an excellent way to contract some hideous disease from its previous tenant, and I did not aspire to become the worldโs only virgin with pubic lice.
โBro,โ Ben said to Radar, โthe freshhoneys know about the Bloody Ben story.โ Radar put the handheld away finally and nodded sympathetically. โSo anyway,โ Ben continued, โmy two remaining strategies are either to purchase a prom date on the Internet or fly to Missouri and kidnap some nice corn-fed little honeybunny.โ Iโd tried telling Ben that โhoneybunnyโ sounded more sexist and lame than retro-cool, but he refused to abandon the practice. He called his own mother a honeybunny. There was no fixing him.
โIโll ask Angela if she knows anybody,โ Radar said. โAlthough getting you a date to prom will be harder than turning lead into gold.โ
โGetting you a date to prom is so hard that the hypothetical idea itself is actually used to cut diamonds,โ I added.
Radar tapped a locker twice with his fist to express his approval, and then came back with another. โBen, getting you a date to prom is so hard that the American government believes the problem cannot be solved with diplomacy, but will instead require force.โ
I was trying to think of another one when we all three simultaneously saw the human-shaped container of anabolic steroids known as Chuck Parson walking toward us with some intent. Chuck Parson did not participate in organized sports, because to do so would distract from the larger goal of his life: to one day be convicted of homicide. โHey, faggots,โ he called.
โChuck,โ I answered, as friendly as I could muster. Chuck hadnโt given us any serious trouble in a couple yearsโsomeone in cool kid land laid down the edict that we were to be left alone. So it was a little unusual for him even to talk to us.
Maybe because I spoke and maybe not, he slammed his hands against the lockers on either side of me and then leaned in close enough for me to contemplate his toothpaste brand. โWhat do you know about Margo and Jase?โ
โUh,โ I said. I thought of everything I knew about them: Jase was Margo Roth Spiegelmanโs first and only serious boyfriend. They began dating at the tail end of last year. They were both going to University of Florida next year. Jase got a baseball scholarship there. He was never over at her house, except to pick her up. She never acted as if she liked him all that much, but then she never acted as if she liked anyone all that much. โNothing,โ I said finally.
โDonโt shit me around,โ he growled.
โI barely evenย knowย her,โ I said, which had become true.
He considered my answer for a minute, and I tried hard to stare at his close-set eyes. He nodded very slightly, pushed off the lockers, and walked away to attend his first-period class: The Care and Feeding of Pectoral Muscles. The second bell rang. One minute to class. Radar and I had calc; Ben had finite mathematics. The classrooms were adjacent; we walked toward them together, the three of us in a row, trusting that the tide of classmates would part enough to let us by, and it did.
I said, โGetting you a date to prom is so hard that a thousand monkeys typing at a thousand typewriters for a thousand years would never once type โI will go to prom with Ben.โโ
Ben could not resist tearing himself apart. โMy prom prospects are so poor that Qโs grandma turned me down. She said she was waiting for Radar to ask her.โ
Radar nodded his head slowly. โItโs true, Q. Your grandma loves the brothers.โ
It was so pathetically easy to forget about Chuck, to talk about prom even though I didnโt give a shit about prom. Such was life that morning: nothing really mattered that much, not the good things and not the bad ones. We were in the business of mutual amusement, and we were reasonably prosperous.
I spent the next three hours in classrooms, trying not to look at the clocks above various blackboards, and then looking at the clocks, and then being amazed that only a few minutes had passed since I last looked at the clock. Iโd had nearly four years of experience looking at these clocks, but their sluggishness never ceased to surprise. If I am ever told that I have one day to live, I will head straight for the hallowed halls of Winter Park High School, where a day has been known to last a thousand years.
But as much as it felt like third-period physics would never end, it did, and then I was in the cafeteria with Ben. Radar had fifth-period lunch with most of our other friends, so Ben and I generally sat together alone, a couple seats between us and a group of drama kids we knew. Today, we were both eating mini pepperoni pizzas.
โPizzaโs good,โ I said. He nodded distractedly. โWhatโs wrong?โ I asked.
โNuffing,โ he said through a mouthful of pizza. He swallowed. โI know you think itโs dumb, but I want to go to prom.โ
โ1. I do think itโs dumb; 2. If you want to go, just go; 3. If Iโm not mistaken, you havenโt even asked anyone.โ
โI asked Cassie Hiney during math. I wrote her a note.โ I raised my eyebrows questioningly. Ben reached into his shorts and slid a heavily folded piece of paper to me. I flattened it out:
Ben,
Iโd love to go to prom with you, but Iโm already going
with Frank. Sorry!
โC
I refolded it and slid it back across the table. I could remember playing paper football on these tables. โThat sucks,โ I said.
โYeah, whatever.โ The walls of sound felt like they were closing in on us, and we were silent for a while, and then Ben looked at me very seriously and said, โIโm going to get so much play in college. Iโm going to be in theย Guinness Book of World Recordsย under the category โMost Honeybunnies Ever Pleased.โโ
I laughed. I was thinking about how Radarโs parents actuallyย wereย in theย Guinness Bookย when I noticed a pretty African-American girl with spiky little dreads standing above us. It took me a moment to realize that the girl was Angela, Radarโs I-guess-girlfriend.
โHi,โ she said to me.
โHey,โ I said. Iโd had classes with Angela and knew her a little, but we didnโt say hello in the hallway or anything. I motioned for her to sit. She scooted a chair to the head of the table.
โI figure that you guys probably know Marcus better than anyone,โ she said, using Radarโs real name. She leaned toward us, her elbows on the table.
โItโs a shitty job, but someoneโs got to do it,โ Ben answered, smiling.
โDo you think heโs, like, embarrassed of me?โ
Ben laughed. โWhat? No,โ he said.
โTechnically,โ I added, โyouย should be embarrassed ofย him.โ
She rolled her eyes, smiling. A girl accustomed to compliments. โBut heโs never, like, invited me to hang out with you, though.โ
โOhhhh,โ I said, getting it finally. โThatโs because heโs embarrassed ofย us.โ
She laughed. โYou seem pretty normal.โ
โYouโve never seen Ben snort Sprite up his nose and then spit it out of his mouth,โ I said.
โI look like a demented carbonated fountain,โ he deadpanned.
โBut really, you wouldnโt worry? I mean, weโve been dating for five weeks, and heโs never even taken me to his house.โ Ben and I exchanged a knowing glance, and I scrunched up my face to suppress laughter. โWhat?โ she asked.
โNothing,โ I said. โHonestly, Angela. If he was forcing you to hang out with us and taking you to his house all the timeโโ
โThen it would definitely mean heย didnโtย like you,โ Ben finished.
โAre his parents weird?โ
I struggled with how to answer that question honestly. โUh, no. Theyโre cool. Theyโre just kinda overprotective, I guess.โ
โYeah, overprotective,โ Ben agreed a little too quickly.
She smiled and then got up, saying she had to go say hi to someone before lunch was over. Ben waited until she was gone to say anything. โThat girl is awesome,โ Ben said.
โI know,โ I answered. โI wonder if we can replace Radar with her.โ
โSheโs probably not that good with computers, though. We need someone whoโs good at computers. Plus I bet she sucks at Resurrection,โ which was our favorite video game. โBy the way,โ Ben added, โnice call saying that Radarโs folks are overprotective.โ
โWell, itโs not my place to tell her,โ I said.
โI wonder how long till she gets to see the Team Radar Residence and Museum.โ Ben smiled.
The period was almost over, so Ben and I got up and put our trays onto the conveyer belt. The very same one that Chuck Parson had thrown me onto freshman year, sending me into the terrifying netherworld of Winter Parkโs dishwashing corps. We walked over to Radarโs locker and were standing there when he raced up just after the first bell.
โI decided during government that I would actually, literally suck donkey balls if it meant I could skip that class for the rest of the semester,โ he said.
โYou can learn a lot about government from donkey balls,โ I said. โHey, speaking of reasons you wish you had fourth-period lunch, we just dined with Angela.โ
Ben smirked at Radar and said, โYeah, she wants to know why sheโs never been over to your house.โ
Radar exhaled a long breath as he spun the combination to open his locker. He breathed for so long I thought he might pass out. โCrap,โ he said finally.
โAre you embarrassed about something?โ I asked, smiling.
โShut up,โ he answered, poking his elbow into my gut.
โYou live in a lovely home,โ I said.
โSeriously, bro,โ added Ben. โSheโs a really nice girl. I donโt see why you canโt introduce her to your parents and show her Casa Radar.โ
Radar threw his books into his locker and shut it. The din of conversation around us quieted just a bit as he turned his eyes toward the heavens and shouted, โIT IS NOT MY FAULT THAT MY PARENTS OWN THE WORLDโS LARGEST COLLECTION OF BLACK SANTAS.โ
Iโd heard Radar say โthe worldโs largest collection of black Santasโ perhaps a thousand times in my life, and it never became any less funny to me. But he wasnโt kidding. I remembered the first time I visited. I was maybe thirteen. It was spring, many months past Christmas, and yet black Santas lined the windowsills. Paper cutouts of black Santas hung from the stairway banister. Black Santa candles adorned the dining room table. A black Santa oil painting hung above the mantel, which was itself lined with black Santa figurines. They had a black Santa Pez dispenser purchased from Namibia. The light-up plastic black Santa that stood in their postage-stamp front yard from Thanksgiving to New Yearโs spent the rest of the year proudly keeping watch in the corner of the guest bathroom, a bathroom with homemade black Santa wallpaper created with paint and a Santa-shaped sponge.
In every room of Radarโs house, except for his own, the place was inundated with black Santasโplaster, plastic, marble, clay, wood, resin, and cloth. Radar’s parents had amassed over twelve hundred of these figures. According to a plaque by their front door, Radar’s home was officially designated as a Santa Landmark by the Society for Christmas.
โYou just have to be honest with her,โ I said. โTell her, โAngela, I really like you, but thereโs something you should know: when we hang out at my place, weโll be under the watchful gaze of twelve hundred black Santas, all with twenty-four hundred eyes.โโ
Radar rubbed his buzz cut and shook his head. โYeah, I donโt think Iโll phrase it like that, but Iโll handle it.โ
I went to my government class, while Ben headed off to his elective on video game design. I counted down the minutes through two more classes, finally feeling a wave of relief when the day ended. Each day felt like a rehearsal for graduation, which was just a month away.
At home, I had an early dinner of two peanut butter and jelly sandwiches. I watched poker on TV until my parents came home at six. They greeted each other and me with hugs. We then had macaroni casserole for a proper dinner. They asked about school and prom, praised their parenting skills, and shared stories about their day dealing with less exceptional people. Afterward, they retired to the living room for TV, and I retreated to my room.
I checked my email, wrote a bit about The Great Gatsby for English, and read some of The Federalist Papers to prep for my government final. I chatted with Ben and then Radar came online. He mentioned โthe worldโs largest collection of black Santasโ four times in our conversation, and each time I laughed. I told him I was happy for him and his new girlfriend. He said it would be a great summer, and I agreed. Even though it was May fifth, it felt like any other day. I enjoyed the predictability of my routine, and that sense of sameness made the date feel insignificantโuntil just before midnight, when Margo Roth Spiegelman slid open my screenless bedroom window, the first time she had done so since telling me to close it nine years ago.