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Chapter no 4

Aristotle and Dante Discover the Secrets of the Universe

WHEN I GOT TO THE POOL, I HAD TO TAKE A SHOWER. That

was one of the rules. Yeah, rules. I hated taking a shower with a bunch of other guys. I donโ€™t know, I just didnโ€™t like that. You know, some guys liked to talk a lot, like it was a normal thing to be in the shower with a bunch of guys and talking about the teacher you hated or the last movie you saw or the girl you wanted to do something with. Not me, I didnโ€™t have anything to say. Guys in the shower. Not my thing.

I walked to the pool and sat on the shallow side and put my feet in the water.

What do you do in a pool when you donโ€™t know how to swim? Learn. I guess that was the answer. Iย hadย managed to teach my body to stay afloat on water. Somehow, Iโ€™d stumbled on some principal of physics. And the best part of the whole thing was that Iโ€™d made the discovery all on my own.

All on my own. I was in love with that phrase. I wasnโ€™t very good at asking for help, a bad habit I inherited from my father. And anyway, the swimming instructors who called themselves lifeguards sucked. They werenโ€™t all that interested in teaching a skinny fifteen-year-old punk how to swim. They were pretty much interested in girls that had suddenly sprouted breasts. They were obsessed with breasts. Thatโ€™s the truth. I heard one of the lifeguards talking to one of the other lifeguards as he was supposed to be watching a group of little kids. โ€œA girl is like a tree covered with leaves. You just want to climb up and tear all those leaves off.โ€

The other guy laughed. โ€œYouโ€™re an asshole,โ€ he said. โ€œNah, Iโ€™m a poet,โ€ he said. โ€œA poet of the body.โ€ And then they both busted out laughing.

Yeah, sure, they were budding Walt Whitmans, the two of them. See, the thing about guys is that I didnโ€™t really care to be around them. I mean, guys really made me uncomfortable. I donโ€™t know why, not exactly. I just, I donโ€™t know, I just didnโ€™t belong. I think it embarrassed the hell out of me that I was a guy. And it really depressed me that there was the distinct possibility that I was going to grow up and be like one of those assholes.ย A girl is like a tree?ย Yeah, and a guy is about as smart as a piece of dead wood infested

with termites. My mom would have said that they were just going through a phase. Pretty soon they would get their brains back. Sure they would.

Maybe lifeย wasย just a series of phasesโ€”one phase after another after another. Maybe, in a couple of years, Iโ€™d be going through the same phase as the eighteen-year-old lifeguards. Not that I really believed in my momโ€™s phase theory. It didnโ€™t sound like an explanationโ€”it sounded like an excuse. I donโ€™t think my mom got the whole guy thing. I didnโ€™t get the guy thing either. And I was a guy.

I had a feeling there was something wrong with me. I guess I was a mystery even to myself. That sucked. I had serious problems.

One thing was for sure: there was no way I was going to ask one of those idiots to help me out with my swimming. It was better to be alone and miserable. It was better to drown.

So I just kept to myself and sort of floated along. Not that I was having fun.

Thatโ€™s when I heard his voice, kind of squeaky. โ€œI can teach you how to swim.โ€

I moved over to the side of the pool and stood up in the water, squinting into the sunlight. He sat down on the edge of the pool. I looked at him suspiciously. If a guy was offering to teach me how to swim, then for sure he didnโ€™t have a life. Two guys without a life? How much fun could that be? I had a rule that it was better to be bored by yourself than to be bored with someone else. I pretty much lived by that rule. Maybe thatโ€™s why I

didnโ€™t have any friends.

He looked at me. Waiting. And then he asked again. โ€œI can teach you how to swim, if you want.โ€

I kind of liked his voice. He sounded like he had a cold, you know, like he was about to lose his voice. โ€œYou talk funny,โ€ I said.

โ€œAllergies,โ€ he said.

โ€œWhat are you allergic to?โ€ โ€œThe air,โ€ he said.

That made me laugh.

โ€œMy nameโ€™s Dante,โ€ he said.

That made me laugh harder. โ€œSorry,โ€ I said. โ€œItโ€™s okay. People laugh at my name.โ€

โ€œNo, no,โ€ I said. โ€œSee, itโ€™s just that my nameโ€™s Aristotle.โ€

His eyes lit up. I mean, the guy was ready to listen to every word I said.

โ€œAristotle,โ€ I repeated.

Then we both kind of went a little crazy. Laughing. โ€œMy fatherโ€™s an English professor,โ€ he said.

โ€œAt least you have an excuse. My fatherโ€™s a mailman. Aristotle is the English version of my grandfatherโ€™s name.โ€ And then I pronounced my grandfatherโ€™s name with this really formal Mexican accent, โ€œAristotiles.ย And my real first name is Angel.โ€ And then I said it in Spanish, โ€œAngel.โ€

โ€œYour name is Angel Aristotle?โ€ โ€œYeah. Thatโ€™s my real name.โ€

We laughed again. We couldnโ€™t stop. I wondered what it was we were laughing about. Was it just our names? Were we laughing because we were relieved? Were we happy? Laughter was another one of lifeโ€™s mysteries.

โ€œI used to tell people my name was Dan. I mean, you know, I just dropped two letters. But I stopped doing that. It wasnโ€™t honest. And anyway, I always got found out. And I felt like a liar and an idiot. I was ashamed of myself for being ashamed of myself. I didnโ€™t like feeling like that.โ€ He shrugged his shoulders.

โ€œEveryone calls me Ari,โ€ I said. โ€œNice to meet you, Ari.โ€

I liked the way he saidย Nice to meet you, Ari. Like he meant it.

โ€œOkay,โ€ I said, โ€œteach me how to swim.โ€ I guess I said it like I was doing him a favor. He either didnโ€™t notice or didnโ€™t care.

Dante was a very precise teacher. He was a real swimmer, understood everything about the movements of arms and legs and breathing, understood how a body functioned while it was in the water. Water was something he loved, something he respected. He understood its beauty and its dangers. He talked about swimming as if it were a way of life. He was fifteen years old. Who was this guy? He looked a little fragileโ€”but he wasnโ€™t. He was disciplined and tough and knowledgeable and he didnโ€™t pretend to be stupid and ordinary. He was neither of those things.

He was funny and focused and fierce. I mean the guy could be fierce. And there wasnโ€™t anything mean about him. I didnโ€™t understand how you could live in a mean world and not have any of that meanness rub off on you. How could a guy live without some meanness?

Dante became one more mystery in a universe full of mysteries.

All that summer, we swam and read comics and read books and argued about them. Dante had all his fatherโ€™s oldย Supermanย comics. He loved

them. He also likedย Archie and Veronica. I hated that shit. โ€œItโ€™s not shit,โ€ he said.

Me, I liked Batman, Spider-Man, and the Incredible Hulk. โ€œWay too dark,โ€ Dante said.

โ€œThis from a guy who loves Conradโ€™sย Heart of Darkness.โ€ โ€œThatโ€™s different,โ€ he said. โ€œConrad wrote literature.โ€

I was always arguing that comic books were literature too. But literature was very serious business for a guy like Dante. I donโ€™t remember ever winning an argument with him. He was a better debater. He was also a better reader. I read Conradโ€™s book because of him. When I finished reading it, I told him I hated it. โ€œExcept,โ€ I said, โ€œitโ€™s true. The world is a dark place. Conradโ€™s right about that.โ€

โ€œMaybe your world, Ari, but not mine.โ€ โ€œYeah, yeah,โ€ I said.

โ€œYeah, yeah,โ€ he said.

The truth is, Iโ€™d lied to him. I loved the book. I thought it was the most beautiful thing Iโ€™d ever read. When my father noticed what I was reading, he told me it was one of his favorite books. I wanted to ask him if heโ€™d read itย beforeย orย afterย heโ€™d fought in Vietnam. It was no good to ask my father questions. He never answered them.

I had this idea that Dante read because he liked to read. Me, I read because I didnโ€™t have anything else to do. He analyzed things. I just read them. I have a feeling I had to look up more words in the dictionary than he did.

I was darker than he was. And Iโ€™m not just talking about our skin coloring. He told me I had a tragic vision of life. โ€œThatโ€™s why you like Spider-Man.โ€

โ€œIโ€™m just more Mexican,โ€ I said. โ€œMexicans are a tragic people.โ€ โ€œMaybe so,โ€ he said.

โ€œYouโ€™re the optimistic American.โ€ โ€œIs that an insult?โ€

โ€œIt might be,โ€ I said.

We laughed. We always laughed.

We werenโ€™t alike, Dante and I. But we did have a few things in common. For one thing, neither one of us was allowed to watch television during the day. Our parents didnโ€™t like what television did to a boyโ€™s mind. Weโ€™d both grown up with lectures that sounded more or less like this:ย Youโ€™re a boy!

Get out there and do something! Thereโ€™s a whole world out there just waiting for you . . .

Dante and I were the last two boys in America who grew up without television. He asked me one day. โ€œDo you think our parents are rightโ€”that thereโ€™s a whole world out there waiting just for us?โ€

โ€œI doubt it,โ€ I said. He laughed.

Then I got this idea. โ€œLetโ€™s ride the bus and see whatโ€™s out there.โ€

Dante smiled. We both fell in love with riding the bus. Sometimes we rode around on the bus all afternoon. I told Dante, โ€œRich people donโ€™t ride the bus.โ€

โ€œThatโ€™s why we like it.โ€

โ€œMaybe so,โ€ I said. โ€œAre we poor?โ€

โ€œNo.โ€ Then he smiled. โ€œIf we ran away from home, weโ€™d both be poor.โ€ I thought that was a very interesting thing to say.

โ€œWould you ever?โ€ I said. โ€œRun away?โ€ โ€œNo.โ€

โ€œWhy not?โ€

โ€œYou want me to tell you a secret?โ€ โ€œSure.โ€

โ€œIโ€™m crazy about my mom and dad.โ€

That really made me smile. Iโ€™d never heard anyone say that about their parents. I mean, no one was crazy about their parents. Except Dante.

And then he whispered in my ear. โ€œThat lady two seats in front of us. I think sheโ€™s having an affair.โ€

โ€œHow do you know?โ€ I whispered.

โ€œShe took off her wedding band as she got on the bus.โ€ I nodded and smiled.

We made up stories about the other bus riders.

For all we knew,ย theyย were writing stories aboutย us.

Iโ€™d never really been very close to other people. I was pretty much a loner. Iโ€™d played basketball and baseball and done the Cub Scout thing, tried the Boy Scout thingโ€”but I always kept my distance from the other boys. I never ever felt like I was a part of their world.

Boys. I watched them. Studied them.

In the end, I didnโ€™t find most of the guys that surrounded me very interesting. In fact, I was pretty disgusted.

Maybe I was a little superior. But I donโ€™t think I was superior. I just didnโ€™t understand how to talk to them, how to be myself around them. Being around other guys didnโ€™t make me feel smarter. Being around guys made me feel stupid and inadequate. It was like they were all a part of this club and I wasnโ€™t a member.

When I was old enough for Boy Scouts, I told my dad I wasnโ€™t going to do it. I couldnโ€™t stand it anymore.

โ€œGive it a year,โ€ my dad said. My dad knew that I sometimes liked to fight. He was always giving me lectures about physical violence. He was trying to keep me away from the gangs at my school. He was trying to keep me from becoming like my brother who wound up in prison. So, because of my brother, whose existence was not even acknowledged, I had to be a good boy scout. That sucked. Why did I have to be a good boy just because I had a bad-boy brother? I hated the way my mom and dad did family math. I humored my dad. I gave it a year. I hated itโ€”except that I learned how to do CPR. I mean, I didnโ€™t like the bit about having to breathe into someone elseโ€™s mouth. That sort of freaked me out. But for some reason the whole thing fascinated me, how you could get a heart to start again. I didnโ€™t quite understand the science of it. But after I got a patch for learning how to bring someone back to life, I quit. I came home and gave the patch to my

dad.

โ€œI think youโ€™re making a mistake.โ€ Thatโ€™s all my dad said.

Iโ€™m not going to wind up in the slammer.ย Thatโ€™s what I wanted to say. Instead, I just mouthed off. โ€œIf you make me go back, I swear Iโ€™ll start smoking pot.โ€

My father gave me a strange look and said, โ€œItโ€™s your life.โ€ As if that was supposed to make everything clear. Another thing about him: he didnโ€™t do lectures. Not real ones, anyway, which drove me crazy. He wasnโ€™t mean or short-tempered, just terse. His advice came in clipped phrases: โ€œItโ€™s your life.โ€ โ€œGive it a try.โ€ โ€œAre you sure about that?โ€ Why couldnโ€™t he just talk to me? How was I supposed to understand him when he kept me at arm’s length? I hated that.

I got along okay. I had friends at schoolโ€”sort of. I wasnโ€™t wildly popular. How could I be? To be wildly popular, you had to convince people you were fun and interesting. I wasnโ€™t really good at that.

There were a few guys I used to hang out with, the Gomez brothers, but they moved away. Then there were a couple of girls, Gina Navarro and Susie Byrd, who seemed to enjoy tormenting me as a pastime. Girls were a mystery, too. Everything felt like a mystery.

I suppose things werenโ€™t so bad. I wasnโ€™t universally loved, but I wasnโ€™t one of those kids everyone hated, either. I was good in a fight, so people generally left me alone.

Mostly, I was invisible, and I think I preferred it that way. And then Dante came along.

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