When I was twelve, I fell in love with an Indian girl named Dawn. She was tall and brown and was the best traditional powwow dancer on the rez. Her braids, wrapped in otter fur, were legendary. Of course, she didnโt care about me. She mostly made fun of me (she called me Junior High Honky for some reason I never understood). But that just made me love her even more. She was out of my league, and even though I was only twelve, I knew that Iโd be one of those guys who always fell in love with the unreachable, ungettable, and uninterested.
One night, at about two in the morning, when Rowdy slept over at my house, I made a full confession.
โMan,โ I said. โI love Dawn so much.โ
He was pretending to be asleep on the floor of my room. โRowdy,โ I said. โAre you awake?โ
โNo.โ
โDid you hear what I said?โ โNo.โ
โI said I love Dawn so much.โ He was quiet.
โArenโt you going to say anything?โ I asked. โAbout what?โ
โAbout what I just said.โ
โI didnโt hear you say anything.โ He was just screwing with me.
โCome on, Rowdy, Iโm trying to tell you something major.โ โYouโre just being stupid,โ he said.
โWhatโs so stupid about it?โ
โDawn doesnโt give a shit about you,โ he said.
And that made me cry. Man, Iโve always cried too easily. I cry when Iโm happy or sad. I cry when Iโm angry. I cry because Iโm crying. Itโs weak. Itโs
the opposite of warrior.
โQuit crying,โ Rowdy said.
โI canโt help it,โ I said. โI love her more than Iโve ever loved anybody.โ Yeah, I was quite the dramatic twelve-year-old.
โPlease,โ Rowdy said. โStop that bawling, okay?โ โOkay, okay,โ I said. โIโm sorry.โ
I wiped my face with one of my pillows and threw it across the room. โJesus, youโre a wimp,โ Rowdy said.
โJust donโt tell anybody I cried about Dawn,โ I said. โHave I ever told anybody your secrets?โ Rowdy asked. โNo.โ
โOkay, then, I wonโt tell anybody you cried over a dumb girl.โ And he didnโt tell anybody. Rowdy was my secret-keeper.