REWIND CHAPTER SEVENTEEN “PLEASE LET ME WONDER, IF I’VE BEEN
THE ONE YOU LOVED”
DECEMBER 20, 1981
Livvie’s mind was made up, and I couldn’t change it.
“Look,” she said, “I do not want to break up with you. We can do this.
I’ll be home for breaks and the summer. We can do this.”
“I’ve done a long-distance relationship before. It wasn’t much fun. And
this is a far bigger distance,” I told her.
“Does that mean you’re not even going to try?”
“I don’t know,” I said. “I’ll have to think about it.”
“Well, isn’t that just great!”
“Don’t blame me!” I snapped at her. “I’m not the one pulling a
last-minute change of plans.”
“You know, you can go with me,” she said. “Not Eastern Michigan, that’s
not a good enough school for you. But the University of Michigan is
very close by, and that’s a great school.”
“Why on earth would I go to Michigan?”
“To be with me?”
“Well, since you’re going out there, and your mind is made up, you
being with me doesn’t seem that important to you, does it?”
“No, that’s not true,” she said. “It’s just that I need a family. I’ve
never had one. Now I can have one.”
And on and on.
Look, part of me understood. But what I saw that she didn’t was that
this would be the end of Livvie and me. No doubt in my mind. What I
felt, but couldn’t say, was that even if we tried the long-distance
thing, she would never stick to it. I’d get a Dear John letter before
Freshman year was over. I had no doubt about it. Even with her father
out there for her, Livvie would get lonely for male companionship.
Like I said, I couldn’t say that. It would really upset her.
I guess I figured I’d probably try the long-distance thing. Not exactly
how I expected to spend my college years, I’ll tell you that. However,
I knew I’d be busy with schoolwork and the band once I got to college.
Maybe it’d be better to have a girlfriend but not have to worry about
actually spending any time with her. It would be kind of lonely,
though. And, like I said, I had no faith she’d keep to it.
On this day, Sunday the 20th, we had a band practice. The gang noticed
I was a bit preoccupied--they also noticed Livvie wasn’t there, which
was unusual. After rehearsing, I told them.
“Damn, that’s tough,” Michelle said. “Are you going to try a
long-distance relationship?”
“I don’t know.” Then I told them what I couldn’t say to Livvie. “Quite
honestly, I can’t see Livvie holding to it.”
“I can,” Debbie argued. “She loves you.”
“She also loves to be loved. And I don’t think loved by someone a
thousand miles away counts.”
“It might be different with her father there,” Stan pointed out.
“It might. I don’t know,” I sighed.
“She’s got a good reason for going out there,” Debbie pointed out.
“Yeah, I know. I just wish she didn’t.”
“Well, if she can keep to it, God knows we’re gonna keep you busy
enough,” Stan laughed. “You know, breaking this fantabulous band into
the Boston music scene. And that’s beside all that studying you’re
gonna have. You won’t have no time to pamper a girlfriend.”
“Is that a warning?” Michelle smirked.
“No, honey. It’s a lot easier to juggle a band and pampering a
girlfriend when said girlfriend is in the band,” Stan chuckled.
“Right answer,” Michelle told him.
“He’s well-trained,” I laughed. “Then again, there’s a problem with no
girlfriend to pamper.”
“What’s that?” Michelle asked.
“No sex.”
Debbie cracked up. “Maybe you can negotiate just being faithful in
love, not sex. You know, tell Livvie she’s got your heart, but you’re
gonna loan your dick out. You’ll get laid after every gig.”
I just grinned. “Don’t give him any ideas,” Michelle laughed.
DECEMBER 25th, 1981
Livvie came over for Christmas. It was, well, strained.
We kept it together through the gift-opening. We kept it together
throughout dinner over my Grandmother’s. Afterwards, driving around, is
when it started to unravel.
“All right,” she said as I drove down the street, “tell me what you’re
afraid of.”
“Fear is only part of it. Dammit, Livvie, I feel abandoned.”
“Great. Now you know how I’ve felt most of my life.”
“And how is that my fault?”
“It isn’t.”
“Then why am I the one that has to pay for it?” Agitated as hell, I
blurted it out. “As for fear, I can’t see you lasting in a
long-distance relationship for even a year. That’s what I’m afraid
of--the inevitable Dear John letter.”
The icy silence lasted a good minute. “If that’s the way you feel,” she
finally said, “well, then, maybe we should just break up now and be
done with it.”
“Maybe we should,” I said quietly.
That got to her. “Are you serious?”
“You brought it up.”
“It was a bluff!”
“Well, I just called it. Maybe we should end it now.”
“You’d throw away what we have just like that?”
The anger came back. “The way I see it, you are the one doing that.”
“No. No, I’m not. Look, I said it before--you could go with me. That
would solve the whole thing. It’s not too late to apply to Michigan.”
Pissed as hell, I abruptly pulled into a parking lot. “First of all, it
is. I applied Early Decision to BC. That means if they accept me, I’m
obliged to go there.”
“Oh, yeah.”
“And even if that weren’t the case, you’re missing the damn point. Why
would I go to Michigan?”
“For me?”
“Not enough.”
“And you think you’re enough to keep me here?”
“You just don’t fucking get it,” I hissed. “Everything I have is here.
Everything. I’m comfortable in this part of the country. I’m a Boston
guy. I have a whole family, and it’s here. Plus, it’s not just my
family. It’s my friends. It’s the band. It’s everything.” What I
couldn’t say is that I learned that the hard way the first time. Going
to St. Louis for college, as I did the first time, was a disaster--and
I didn’t leave nearly as much behind that time as I would be this time.
Anyway, it was something I was sure of. I’d be miserable at Michigan,
Livvie or not.
I took a breath. “You, on the other hand--even if you boil down
everything that’s important to you in Boston to just me, it’s still a
fifty-fifty shot. Me, or your Dad. You made your choice. How’s that
supposed to make me feel?”
“It’s not just that,” she said. “I need to get out of here.”
“Jesus, Livvie, you wouldn’t be living at home if you went to school in
Boston! Your father said he’d cover all your costs, no matter where you
went, so you’d be in the dorm. It’s not like you’d have your damn
mother there.”
“I know,” she said. “I just....it’s hard to put into words. Do you
realize all my friends are yours? I’ve not made a single friend on my
own. The one time in my life I made a friend on my own, it was Beth,
and she did it.”
“Yeah, I know.”
“I just think I need a little independence, but I also need my Dad. I
don’t know if that makes any sense. It probably doesn’t.” She sighed.
“You really think I wouldn’t be able to keep a long-distance
relationship?”
Calmer, I still was honest with her. “No, Livvie, I’m sorry. I don’t.”
“Does that mean you won’t try?”
“I’m still trying to decide that.”
“Do you love me?”
“Of course. You know I do,” I said firmly.
“Isn’t that enough?”
I sighed. “Look, I want you to take this the way I mean it, and not as
me trying to throw something in your face, OK? Think about what I mean
by this.” She nodded. “I love Kara, too.”
She thought for a minute. “Kara and you only ended because of distance?
If Kara had gone here, instead of away, you think you’d still be
together?”
“The answer to the first question is yes. The second question’s a huge
what-if, but probably.”
“But you’re telling me you never fell out of love with her.”
“I didn’t. And I never will.”
“I don’t get what you’re trying to tell me.”
“I’m trying to tell you that love isn’t enough. Love is one thing.
Relationships are another. Love just is. Relationships need nurturing.
My feelings for Kara will never change--but the nature of our
relationship did.”
“And you think if I go that far away, the nature of our relationship
will change?”
“I think it’s a distinct possibility.”
“OK. I understand what you’re saying.” She took a deep breath. “I hate
doing this to you, but I think it’s a chance I need to take.”
“Yeah, I figured,” I said.
“I want to try to maintain our relationship. But I’m not going to twist
your arm.” She got a wry little grin. “Not that I could anyway. It’s up
to you.” I nodded. “What about now?”
“We’re together now, Livvie.”
“OK. Good,” she sighed, with a hint of a smile. “Look, it’s not just my
Dad, you know.”
“What do you mean?”
“Mary--she’s Dad’s wife, my stepmother. I was out there for three days
and she mothered me more than my own damn mother has done my entire
life. And Kerry, my sister--well, being hero-worshiped by a 10-year-old
girl was very cool.”
I had to chuckle. “I could work on Erin if that’s what you need.”
She cracked up. “Are you kidding me? Erin? Your sister Erin? She
wouldn’t stoop to hero-worship if Jesus Christ Himself plopped down in
her bedroom.”
“Good point,” I had to agree with a laugh. Livvie was
right--hero-worship wasn’t Erin’ style. Except if the hero being
worshipped was Erin. “Then again, Declan does. Hero-worship you, I
mean.”
“Can’t argue with that. Anyhow, I understand the reasons for you going.
I do. I just feel like it’s a contest that I’ve lost.”
“I know that’s how you feel. But I also know that it’s not true, it’s
not why I’m doing this. Eddie, I’m 17 years old, almost 18. I’ve never
had a Daddy. And I’m almost getting too old for one.”
“Livvie, now that you’ve found him, he’ll always be your father.”
“I didn’t say father, I said Daddy. There’s a difference.”
“Yeah, I suppose there is,” I agreed.
JANUARY 10th, 1982
My seventeenth birthday. It was a Friday, so I went to school. When I
got home, there it was, sitting in the day’s mail.
The acceptance letter from Boston College.
I was happy. But I wasn’t as thrilled as I thought I’d have been.
I got a quick call from Michelle, who’d also applied early decision and
who got her acceptance letter today as well.
She was thrilled, which helped me regain my enthusiasm. It was, after
all, where I really wanted to go. So, it was a nice talk and we were
making plans and joking. “You know, we really should room together,”
Michelle laughed. “We’re the best of friends and I know you wouldn’t
mind occasionally getting lost when Stan comes to visit.”
“All true, but I don’t think BC lets guys and girls room together,” I
laughed. “There’s always Debbie, though. I know she didn’t apply early
decision, so she doesn’t know yet, but she should get in and BC is her
first choice.”
“We’ve talked about it,” Michelle told me. “We might, but Debbie thinks
she wants to room with someone she doesn’t know, you know, to meet new
people.”
“I can see that. All the college advice I’ve ever read says don’t room
with a hometown friend.”
“Right. And it’s not like Deb and I won’t get sick of each other in
band practice!”
So, talking to Michelle made me feel better. Like I said, I really did
want to go to BC.
I guess I was just in a funk since Livvie had dropped her bomb.
It was times like this when I truly felt seventeen, not half-seventeen
and half-forty seven. Especially in the context of a seventeen-year-old
high school senior trying to plan out his life. Because that’s what I
was, despite the past life. This was the one I had to live, and in this
one, I was seventeen--about to graduate high school, planning for
college.
College was part of it, and plans for that were well underway. But
other plans were now becoming more nebulous. Look, even at seventeen,
the minute you start dating--especially if you’re a diehard romantic,
which I was--you start asking that question about every girl you date:
“Is she the one?”
Then, of course, there’s the bigger question: is there a “one”?
I was inclined, at this point in my life, to say no. Don’t get me
wrong, I still believed in true love, and I still believed in something
akin to soulmates. But what I was beginning to think was that there
wasn’t one. I mean, one true soulmate. I think there was more than one,
or at least more than one possibility.
I guess I’d realized that when I had an amicable breakup with Kara.
Because if there was only one true soulmate, she was mine. If I
believed there was a “one”, I would’ve believed she was it, and
wouldn’t have broken up with her quite so easily. And, I guess,
realizing I was as happy with Livvie as I had been with Kara only
reinforced that belief.
I will say that thinking along these lines did make Livvie’s impending
move a thousand miles away a lot easier to take. Of course, that might
just be rationalization!
With all this whirling through my mind, I gave Kara a call. When she’d
been home for Christmas, we’d gotten together, and she knew there was
something on my mind, but I hadn’t felt comfortable talking about it
yet. On this day, I decided to, so I gave her a call.
“Hey, I was just gonna call you,” she said when she picked up the
phone. “Happy birthday!” Good ol’ Kara, she remembered. After a bit of
small talk, I hit her with it.
“Oh, man, that’s tough,” she said. “Michigan? That might as well be on
the moon. You going to try to have a distance thing?”
“She wants to.”
“And you’re less than enthusiastic.”
“I don’t think she’ll be able to stick to it.”
Kara laughed. “Funny, I don’t think you would!”
“You know me better than that.”
“Yes, true, but let’s face it, Eddie--you’re going to have a whole hell
of a lot of temptation.”
“Yeah, right, they’re lining up as we speak,” I snorted.
“You have no idea, do you?” she said incredulously.
“No idea about what?”
“About what’s gonna happen. Look, you know I love you. I loved you in
eighth grade. But it’s a realistic love. I know what you’re about. I
love you because you’re sweet and giving and smart and interesting. And
you’re a great kisser,” she laughed. “But it was realistic. I knew you
for years before I fell in love with you. Plus, if you remember, you
had to talk me into that first date,” she laughed. “I figured that’s
the way it was with you. Though you’re attractive, you’re not gorgeous,
and you can be awkward. I loved you, still do, but I figured you were
an acquired taste, that you don’t hit anyone between the eyes.”
“I agree with all that,” I laughed. “But being an acquired taste
pre-empts them from lining up at the door. You know what I mean? If
that’s the case, I should be able to avoid temptation.”
“I’m not done,” she said. “That’s what I used to think. I don’t think
all of that anymore. What you don’t get is you’ve transformed yourself.”
“How did I do that?” I asked, bemused.
“You joined a band,” she said. “You don’t get what you look like up on
stage, singing, playing your guitar. Your attractiveness is multiplied
by about twenty, and your awkward bit disappears completely. Look, I
love the Eddie I’ve always known--but the first time I saw you play, it
was like seeing Eddie squared. And you’re gonna go into Boston and
start playing the clubs? They are going to be lining up. Guaranteed.”
“You’re exaggerating.”
“No, I’m not.” She took a deep breath. “That first time I saw you guys
play? Look, as much as I love Peter--and I do--I almost dumped him on
the spot. So I could go attack you. I’ll be honest, the only thing that
really stopped me from doing so was Olivia. I knew that you had just
gotten together with her, you were happy, and I love you too much to
fuck with you like that. But if you’d been single that night? Peter
would’ve been history and I would’ve been on you like a leech.”
“You’re kidding,” I gasped.
“No, I’m not. Look, I’ve seen you play a few times and I’m more used to
it right now, and I really do love Peter. But, shit, Eddie, it was
incredible. Look, you’re a reasonably charming guy in any case. But
when you’re on stage? That’s not charm, that’s charisma, and buckets of
it. It shoots out of your pores like sparks. I can barely describe it.
You’ve no idea how appealing you are onstage. And when you get
offstage, then whoever it is that’s pounced on you will figure out all
those other cool things about you.”
“I think you’re just biased,” I chuckled.
“You think so? Trust me, I’m not the only girl that’s noticed it. And
we’ll be able to test it. Don’t forget, I’ll be attending school 20
minutes from Boston, and it’s an all-girl school.” Kara was going to go
to Wellesley. “When you start gigging in Boston, I’ll be there. And
I’ll bring friends. They’re going to pounce on you.”
“We’ll see,” I laughed. “Peter’s going to school in Boston?” I said,
changing the subject.
“Yeah. Harvard, where else?” she laughed. “Legacy, and all that.”
Peter’s father had gone to Harvard, Kara had told me that. “Which is
close enough to Wellesley, now that we’re older and have cars and all
that. We don’t consider it long-distance.”
“Nope, you shouldn’t, considering one of my band mates is planning on
Framingham State, and Framingham’s past Wellesley.”
“Stan?”
“Yeah. Michelle got into BC Early Decision as I did, so at least I’ll
have her to go bug.”
“When Stan’s not visiting, you mean,” she laughed.
“Exactly!”
FEBRUARY 24th, 1982
I suppose some of what Kara said had sunk in, though I really wasn’t
thinking of it that way. But I did, a little. It’s the age-old
question: do you stay with someone because you love them, or because
you’re afraid of being alone? Well, if Kara was right, I didn’t need to
be afraid of being alone. Now, don’t get me wrong--I loved Livvie. If
she were staying local, I wouldn’t be asking myself that question. But
I was--because it was do you stay with someone you’re not going to have
a real relationship with?
All this was compounded by the fact that Livvie had insisted on going
to Michigan for February break, which had been the previous week. This
time, I protested--if she were leaving for good in late August, we
should have every minute together we could. And we’d always spent loads
of time together on school breaks. She went anyway.
I guess what had kind of crept into my mind is that I was going to live
for me, not for me-and-Livvie. And I felt it was a decision that had
been taken out of my hands, which probably made me even more upset
about it.
That decision cropped up on this day.
It was a Wednesday. We had band practice. But before we got started
playing, Kenny had something to tell us. Kenny had sort of become our
defacto booking agent--people tended to go to him with gigs. That was
fine with us; he was good at organizing such things, and he enjoyed it.
On this day, he had a biggie for us.
“The student council wants us to play the prom,” he said. “Our prom,
the Senior Prom.”
“Wow!” Debbie squealed. “That would be so awesome!”
“Would it?” Kenny asked.
“Why wouldn’t it?” Debbie asked.
“Well, you have to ask that question to your fellow bandmates who have
girlfriends or boyfriends,” Kenny asked. “Do you guys want to spend
your Senior Prom onstage?”
Stan and Michelle looked at each other and grinned. “Hell, yes!” Stan
said.
Dave and Karen shared a similar look. “Of course,” Karen said. “Playing
or dancing? That’s a no-brainer. We can still go to the prom. We just
won’t be dancing. Who the hell wants to dance?”
“Exactly,” Michelle agreed. “I think we should do the whole bit,
though.”
“What do you mean?” Debbie asked.
“I think we should dress up. You think you guys can play in tuxes?”
We all nodded. “It might be a little hot, but we can undo ties and
stuff in the second set,” Stan laughed.
“Right,” Michelle grinned. “So, we treat it as a prom. We get dressed,
we show up, get our pictures taken, sit down to eat and all. Just,
instead of getting up to dance, we get up to play.”
“That sounds great!” Karen said.
“Right,” Michelle agreed. “Well, we have the established band couples
in agreement, now we just have to hear from the two guys whose
girlfriends aren’t in the band.”
“I’ve already talked to Lisa. She’s not much for dancing, either,”
Kenny grinned. “She did say something about dressing up, though, so
she’ll like Michelle’s idea.”
“Good. Now, how about you?” she asked me.
“I’m in.”
“Shouldn’t you talk to Livvie first?”
“I’m in,” I repeated firmly. “I want to do this.”
“OK,” Michelle said, hesitantly. “We’re gonna play the prom, then?”
We all agreed. In fact, we were all looking forward to it.
FEBRUARY 26th, 1982
Livvie was absolutely not happy.
We were out, sitting at a roast beef restaurant, when I told her.
“You’re what?!” she hissed. “You can’t!”
“We’re still going to go, Livvie,” I told her. “We’re going to get
dressed up and the whole thing.”
“But I want to dance at my prom!”
“That never bothered you before.”
“It wasn’t a prom before!”
“What difference does it make? The big deal with a prom is the whole
dressing up thing, and we’re going to do that. Outside of that, it’s
just another dance.”
“It’s not another dance for me. And what really bugs me is that you
just did this, without even discussing it with me!”
I just looked at her. I didn’t say it, I just looked at her.
She got it. “OK, so this is some kind of epic revenge?” she asked.
“Because I’m going away?”
“No, it’s not revenge,” I told her. “It’s me deciding to do what’s best
for me. Just like you did.”
“They’re not the same thing.”
“No, they’re not,” I riposted. “My decision only deals with one night
out of our lives. Yours deals with four years.”
She calmed down a little. “Look, Eddie, that’s one of the reasons I
wanted the prom. You know, one night for us before I go away.”
“Well, that’s not all that important to me anymore,” I said.
She looked like I’d slapped her. I felt bad about that, but that’s the
way I felt. “I think you should take me home now,” she said in a
clipped voice.
“Fine by me,” I shrugged.
We were driving, and she said, “There’s no way I can talk you out of
this?”
“No,” I said. “Could I talk you out of going to Michigan?”
“This is some sort of revenge!”
“No, it’s not.” By that time, we were pulling up in front of her house.
“Listen to me. I’m not trying for revenge. I’m just doing what I want
to do.”
“Make my prom miserable?”
“No. Make mine not. If I didn’t play and just went to the prom with
you, I wouldn’t have a good time.”
“You wouldn’t have a good time dancing with me?”
“OK,” I said with a little grin, “because I’ve been in a band the
entire time we’ve been going out, this hasn’t ever come up before. But
let me tell you a little secret about myself. I absolutely hate to
dance. Hate it, hate it, hate it. Dancing is for people that can’t play
an instrument. As Schroeder once said to Lucy, ‘Musicians don’t dance.’
The closest I ever want to get to dancing is air guitar. Shit. What do
you think is one of the reasons I’m so damn happy I play in a band?
Because I never have to dance!”
“Oh,” she said, finally flashing at least the hint of a smile. “I
didn’t know that.”
“Now you do,” I grinned. “Look, I could grudgingly say yes. And you
might, and I said might, drag me out on the floor to dance to a slow
song or two. And the rest of the night you’d be badgering me to dance
some more and I’d be resistant. Plus, I’m not a good dancer. At all.
I’m much better at singing.”
“I get you. So this really isn’t about me going to Michigan?”
“Not mostly, but I’m not going to lie to you. You going to Michigan has
made me less willing to sacrifice my own desires for yours. If you
weren’t going to Michigan, I probably would’ve agreed.”
“But grudgingly, and only for me, and you wouldn’t have had a good
time.”
“Right.”
“OK. I have to think about this, but I’m less upset about it than I
was.” She gave me a genuine grin. “You really hate dancing?”
“Oh, you betcha,” I chuckled. “Look, we’re learning a new song, ‘Only
The Lonely’ by the Motels. It’s just out recently. But it’s a slow
dance song. And I don’t play on it. It’s my break song,” I laughed.
“So, you get one dance.”
“Well, there’s that, then,” she smiled. “I have to think about it.”
“OK.”
She went inside then. I did get a goodbye kiss, at least.
FEBRUARY 27th, 1982
This day, a Saturday, we had a band practice. We did it early, though,
as Kenny had something to do in the afternoon. So we got together about
9:30 in the morning and played until one.
Afterwards, Michelle, Debbie and I decided to go over to the mall
across the street from Stan’s house and get some lunch. Stan was going
to come, but his mother loudly reminded him he’d promised to clean up
something-or-other. “She never forgets the damn chores,” he grumbled.
“You guys go. No hitting on my girlfriend!” he told me.
“You spoil all my fun,” I grinned.
“Mine, too,” Michelle twinkled. That even made Stan crack up!
Anyhow, we got over to the mall and decided to hit the Friendly’s. We
sat in a booth and chatted through the burgers. I told them about my
conversation with Livvie the previous night.
“Man, that’s tough,” Michelle said. “You were kind of asking for it,
though, by not even asking her.”
“Yeah, I know,” I agreed.
“She’s right about that--but I’m with you,” Debbie said with a giggle.
“Who the hell wants to dance? How freakin’ boring!”
“That part I do agree with,” Michelle laughed. “I love Stan, but the
only thing I dance with is my bass. He’ll get the one dance at the
wedding, and that’s my dancing days.”
“And I’ll bet he agrees wholeheartedly,” I said.
“Oh, no doubt!”
“This is why I’m glad I don’t have a steady boyfriend,” Debbie said.
“Far less complications.”
“Hey, everybody in the band except you has a partner, but I’m the only
one with a complication,” I said.
“That’s because everyone in the band is dating someone else in the
band,” Debbie laughed. “Except for Kenny. And when Kenny says ‘jump’,
Lisa asks ‘how high?’”
That cracked us all up, but I had to say, “That’s not as bad as you
think. That works both ways.”
“Tell me one thing that Lisa asked Kenny to do that he’s done,” Debbie
said.
“Did you notice he got a haircut?” I laughed. “That was Lisa. Well, it
was because her parents freak out, but Lisa asked him to do it.”
“All right, all right,” Debbie laughed. “Lisa and Kenny’s relationship
aside, everyone else in the band is dating someone in the band.” She
bat her lashes at me. “Maybe you should’ve dated someone in the band.”
“What? You?” Michelle laughed. “You two would be tearing each other
apart within a week if you ever dated!”
“Well, yeah, but the make-up sex would be dynamite!” Debbie said. I was
in a full blush by this point!
“You don’t need to date someone to have sex,” Michelle riposted. “Deb,
you of all people know that!”
“True, very true,” Deb said, grinning, still batting her lashes at me.
“Yeah, yeah, yeah,” I said, still blushing. “You just point your
baby-blues elsewhere, Romelski. I’m still taken.”
“Today,” Deb said.
“Now, now, let’s not tempt the poor boy,” Michelle laughed. “We’re
supposed to be helping him fix things with Livvie, remember?”
“We are?” Deb said, all mock-innocence. “That’s not how I answered the
poll.” I just glared at her--probably not looking as fierce as I was
trying to! “All right, all right,” she grinned. “I’ll stop trying to
wheedle my way into your bed.”
“Today,” Michelle laughed.
“Yeah, you’re a big help,” I said to Michelle.
“Ain’t I?”
“Seriously, Eddie,” Debbie said, “what do you plan to do?”
“We’re playing the prom. That’s final. The rest of it, I guess I’ll
just play by ear.”
“All my kidding aside,” Debbie said, “you know she loves you.”
“To a point,” I said. “Yes, she does, but only to a point.”
“She’s in a tough position,” Michelle said. “You do realize that.”
“I know all that,” I said, slightly exasperated. “And I was trying to
see her side of it. Until she gave me the big shitstorm about us
playing the prom.”
“Why did that bother you?” Michelle said.
“Because it was like, OK, I want you to do everything my way. Until I
abandon you for Michigan.”
“All right, I see your point,” Michelle said, “but stilll....”
“I don’t know if there’s any ‘but stills’ involved anymore,” Debbie put
in. “Because Eddie’s right. Livvie’s got no business bugging him about
doing what’s best for him at the prom--because she is abandoning him.
If she can do what’s best for her with something as big as going away
for four years, the prom’s a minor thing and she should understand.”
“Thanks, Deb. The check’s in the mail,” I joked.
“She’s just agreeing with you because she’s still trying to wheedle her
way into your bed,”Michelle laughed. “No, seriously, Eddie, I do
understand why you’re upset.”
“Thanks. Wish Livvie did.”
“She’ll come around,” Michelle said. “Anyhow, changing the subject, how
are your grades this year?”
“Just great. Still straight A’s. Even in calculus.”
“I hate your guts,” Michelle laughed. “You’re not going to let me sneak
in there for salutatorian, are you?”
“Not on your life!”
MARCH 13th, 1982
I tried. I really did. Livvie was still upset about the prom. I was
trying to make it up to her.
Until today.
Today, I gave up.
I was trying not to take anything personally. I really was. But what
she told me today, I couldn’t help it.
“Oh, by the way,” she said as we were driving in the car, “I’m going
back to Michigan for April vacation.”
I almost drove off the road. “You’re what?”
“Is this a problem?” she said.
“No. No, of course not. Why would it be a fucking problem? You’re going
to Michigan permanently in five fucking months. Why on earth would you
going out there for another damn week be a problem? Especially when
it’s a vacation week. I mean we have all the time in the world, why
would you cutting down on that time be a fucking problem?” I abruptly
pulled over to the side of the road. “Here’s an idea. Why don’t you
just stay there? Finish high school out there. Don’t fucking come back.
You’re so eager to get out there with Daddy, don’t fucking bother
coming back.”
“You’re upset,” she said.
“No shit.”
“I have to go.”
“Bullshit. Not now, not April vacation, you don’t.”
“I have things to do, things to set up,” she said weakly.
“Like what? It’s too early to register for classes. You’ve already seen
the campus.”
“There’s some paperwork I have to sign. For some of the financial
stuff, since Dad teaches there.”
“He couldn’t send that stuff out to you and have you mail it back
signed?” I snorted.
“Well, I suppose he could. Look, if you don’t want me to go, I won’t
go,” she said, although a bit petulantly.
And I caught it. “Oh, no, you don’t,” I snapped. “You’re not going to
put that on my head. You already decided to go, again not giving a crap
about how I might feel, so go.”
“You’re right, I don’t care how you feel,” she snapped back. “All
you’ve tried to do since I told you I was going away to school is make
me feel guilty, and try to get back at me.”
“Fine.” I was still pulled over. I quickly pulled into the street. And
just as quickly made a U-turn.
“Where are you going?” she said.
“I’m taking you home. You don’t care about how I feel? You don’t have
to fucking worry about it any more.”
“What does that mean?”
“It means we’re done. Over. No longer dating.”
She stared straight out the car window for a beat. Then she said, in a
near-whisper, “God, that’s not what I want.”
“Probably not. You want to have your cake and eat it too. Basically at
my expense. I’ve had it.”
“Look, really, if it means that much to you, I’ll cancel the trip in
April.”
“Why? You just said you don’t care how I feel.”
“Well, I didn’t mean it that way.”
We pulled up in front of her house. “I get it,” I said. “What you meant
is that you figured I’d just roll over like a puppy. You’ve been
thinking that since you decided to go away to school. Jesus, Livvie, do
you really think I’m that much of a wimp?”
“No, it’s not that. I guess I don’t understand. If you’re that upset
about being away from me for a week, why would you break up with me?
Isn’t that cutting off your nose to spite your face?”
“I didn’t break up with you because you’re going away. I broke up with
you because you admitted that you don’t care how I feel. And that’s
become a pattern. You don’t care. It’s been plain as day for months.”
“I didn’t mean it like that. I do care. I just have to do what’s right
for me.”
“You know, that may be a justification for you going out there to
school. But going out there for April vacation? It doesn’t work.”
“You’re acting like I’m doing it to deliberately screw you over or
something!”
“Yes, I am, aren’t I?” I said.
“You really think that?”
“Yes.”
“Dammit, Eddie, not everything is about you!”
“And that’s the problem. Nothing is about me. I don’t ever enter your
thought process anymore. I don’t expect everything to be about me. But
if you’re supposed to be my damn girlfriend, it should sometimes be
about me, shouldn’t it?” She didn’t say anything to that--because she
couldn’t. “You don’t have to go. And even if you did--you ever think of
asking me to come along?”
“Dad’s paying for my ticket,” she said.
“I figured, but you know I have the money to pony up for my own ticket.”
“And I’m staying with Dad.”
“And if he didn’t want me there, I could afford a hotel, too. At least
we’d be in the same state for vacation.”
“I didn’t think you’d go,” she finally said weakly.
“But you never even bothered to ask, did you?”
“No. I’m sorry. Eddie, I don’t want to break up with you.”
“I’ll think about it,” I said.
APRIL 25th, 1982
We didn’t break up. But, like I said, I pretty much gave up.
We went out. We spent time together. We even had sex every so often.
But my heart wasn’t in it.
And, because of that, I’ll admit it--I became somewhat of a bastard.
I blew her off if I had something else to do. Barely paid attention to
her half the time when we were together. I was just disinterested. And
it really wasn’t me trying to punish her or anything like that--I
really was becoming disinterested, more and more every day. I guess we
were still together more out of inertia than anything else.
Did I love her? Sure. But I didn’t love, or like for that matter, the
way I was being treated. I was an afterthought. So I made her one. She
didn’t like it.
I guess it all came to a head the Friday that April Vacation started.
She asked me to drive her to the airport--her flight left at 7 pm. She
didn’t want to leave her car at the airport all week.
“Sorry, I have plans,” I told her.
“Plans?”
“Plans. I’m going out for dinner and a movie with some friends.”
“Who?”
“Stan, Michelle, Debbie, and DeeDee from up my street. Her friend
Ashley might come, too.”
“You can’t postpone that until Saturday or something?”
“Why would I want to?” I told her. “I don’t want you going to Michigan
in the first place, so I should cancel my plans to drive you to the
airport? How does that make sense?”
“Fine,” she snorted.
Like I said, I just wasn’t in a nice mood.
It all came to a head on this day. It was a Sunday, and Olivia had
gotten back from Michigan that morning. She called me that afternoon,
and asked me to come over.
“I was thinking all week,” she said when I got there, “and I’ve decided
that I don’t want to miss my Senior Prom.”
“You’re not going to miss it,” I said.
“By your lights, I’m not. But as far as I’m concerned, I am. I’m done
being the adoring girlfriend of mister high-and-mighty rock star. I
want to go to the prom with someone that’ll pay some attention to me
there. So, I’m going to find another date.”
“If you do that, it’s the end for us,” I said calmly.
“I know,” she replied, just as calmly. “I’m sorry. But we’re not
getting along anyway. I’m not going to sacrifice the biggest night of
high school for a relationship that’s dying.”
So, that was that.
Sure, I saw it coming--and I know I helped it along. It was probably
for the best. But, damn.
Not for the first time, I rued the day her father ever stepped back
into her life.
Damn.
MAY 1st, 1982
I just stuck with the rest of my life.
The gang consoled me, as best they could. I was all right, really.
Upset, sure--but I survived other breakups, I’d survive this one. I did
love her, yes. But we were moving in different directions.
“I have one question,” Deb had asked me. “Are you going to be OK up on
stage playing at the prom, when you’re looking down and seeing her
there with some other guy?”
“Yeah,” I told her. “In fact, I want to make sure we kick some serious
ass at this prom.”
“That’s the spirit!” Stan laughed.
This day, a Saturday, we were practicing. We’d worked on the set list
some, adding new songs. We got a surprise this day.
Debbie had already gotten some vocal time in some of the new songs.
We’d added The Go-Go’s “Our Lips Are Sealed” to the set, and Debbie was
doing Jane Wiedlin’s part. Which was the high harmony throughout the
whole song--but also the lead vocal on the middle eight. We’d also
worked up a version of “Under Pressure” with Debbie taking Freddie
Mercury’s part--and going up an octave with it. It was fantastic. I’d
suggested it, and Debbie went with it. I’d heard a bootleg of Bowie
doing this song with one of his female backup singers doing the Freddie
Mercury part like that, up an octave, so that’s what gave me the idea.
Of course, that bootleg was from 2001 so I couldn’t exactly tell Debbie
about it! But she got the basic idea and went for it.
However, duets--and backing vocals, which she’d always done--were one
thing. An actual lead vocal? That was another. Debbie’d always said she
didn’t want to have a lead. Today, she changed her mind. She told us
she’d like to sing a song at the prom.
A specific song: “Angel of the Morning.”
That would take some serious guts--too much, if you ask me. Michelle
must have agreed, because she asked Deb, “Are you sure?”
“Yeah, I’m sure,” Deb smiled. “Let’s just say it’ll be my little
good-bye to all my classmates.”
“If you’re sure,” I said.
“I’m sure.”
So, we worked it up. Deb also played the rather tricky acoustic guitar
part--but she did so wonderfully. It sounded good. I just hoped she
could get through it without breaking down. To hear the so-called
‘school slut’ who also happened to be one of my best friends singing
that set of lyrics--well, it almost made me break down.
Anyhow, we were running through the list of songs, when Dave came up
with a concern. “What are we going to end with?” he said. “We can’t end
with ‘What I Like About You,’ not for the prom. We’ve got to end with a
slow song, don’t we?”
“Right,” Michelle said. “Dave’s right. What’s the last dance going to
be?”
“That’s easy,” I smiled. “’Open Arms.’ Is there any other choice?”
Journey’s “Open Arms” had been out a few months. It had to be the last
dance. That was the Big Prom Theme of the early eighties. As cheesy as
it was--and it was--it was the only real choice. Half the proms in the
USA ended with “Open Arms” in 1982.
“Can you sing it?” Stan asked.
“Is the Pope Catholic?” I joked. “Does a bear shit in the woods?”
“Does the Pope shit in the woods?” Debbie laughed.
“I don’t know about that one,” I laughed, “but I do know I can sing
‘Open Arms’.”
“Let’s hear it,” Kenny said, and hit the piano intro.
Look--my voice, at the time of the send-back at 42, had deteriorated
some. All those years of smoking, no doubt. But I could sing “Open
Arms” even at 42. At 17? No problem. My voice is on the high end of the
tenor range--and, when I want it to be, it’s a big voice. So, yeah, I
could sing Steve Perry songs.
The band wanted to make sure, though, so I obliged them. Kenny played
the piano part, and I sang.
Look, they knew I could sing. And they knew about the big voice--we had
enough Springsteen songs that showed that off. Plus the odd foray into
“It’s The Same Old Song”--nobody’s got a bigger voice than Levi Stubbs
and I sang that song well. So, the band knew I could go big.
But big and high? We really didn’t have anything like that in the
repertoire. “Open Arms” was big and high. I guess I surprised them a
little bit--because when I hit the second verse, with all those
swooping high passages, they were all looking at me like I had three
heads.
And after I finished, and they all stared at me in stunned silence for
a few seconds, Debbie capped it off by proclaiming, “Oh my God. You
just made me wet!”
“Oh, he makes me wet half the time he picks up a microphone,” Karen
said with an impish grin, “but that one was especially good.”
“I did not need to know that,” Dave grumbled.
“Sorry, sweetie,” Karen giggled.
Debbie laughed. We all looked at her. “I’m just thinking,” she said.
“If you’re making the girls in the band wet singing that song--imagine
what it’s going to do to your estranged girlfriend!”
“Oy,” I laughed. “So I take it we’re going to end with it?”
“Damn straight!” Stan proclaimed.
MAY 3rd, 1982
So, at least the band was going well.
As was school. I got the official confirmation of that today. I found
out early in the morning when I got called down to the office.
Michelle, having heard the call for me to go to the office and guessing
why, cornered me at lunch.
“You got it, didn’t you? Salutatorian.”
“Yeah,” I said. “I’d tell you I was sorry--but I’m not.” We both
laughed at that.
“At least I lost out to a friend,” she said. “Now you get to write a
speech.”
“Yup. At least I have a little over a month to do it.”
“Know what it’s going to be about?” she asked.
“I have a few ideas,” I smiled.
“Good,” she said. She took a bite from her food, then looked at me
again. “I heard through the grapevine that Livvie found a date for the
prom.”
“Yeah.”
“You OK with that?”
”What choice do I have? You know, whatever. I can live with it.”
“Yeah,” she said. “It’s too bad, though. You should have a date. I know
you can’t dance, but you should have someone to walk in with, someone
to eat with, take pictures with, all that. Even if you have to play,
you should have a date.”
“I know,” I said, smiling.
Michelle looked at me for a minute, then smiled back. “You have a plan,
don’t you?”
“Yup.”
She looked at me for a minute, then the smile unfolded into a huge
grin. “You’re going to ask Debbie, aren’t you?”
“Yup,” I grinned back.
“She’ll be thrilled.”
“I hope so.”
I asked her that afternoon. Michelle was right--she was thrilled.
Hey, we were friends. Even if we weren’t playing--if Livvie and I had
broken up, I would’ve asked Debbie. We were playing instead of dancing,
but outside of that we were going to do all the ‘prom’ things. Even if
we hit a post-prom party, she’d be my date there as well. I was happy
about it--and so was she.
At least that was settled.
MAY 15th, 1982
We were practicing, working out the final set list. Prom was less than
a month away.
After running through part of the setlist, Stan called a break.
“We have something we need to talk about,” he said. “After-prom. We
were talking about getting rooms at the hotel.”
“Yeah,” Michelle added. “We need to know who’s in. Stan and I are.”
“We are,” Karen said, pointing to Dave, who nodded agreement.
“You think we can swing this?” Kenny asked Lisa, who was there watching
us.
“For prom night? I’ll make sure of it,” Lisa grinned.
“The parents won’t freak?” Kenny asked.
“I’ll come up with something,” Lisa assured him. “We’re going to a
party, or we have to do something with the instruments, or something.
Or maybe I’ll just tell them the truth. What are they going to do? I’m
a good little girl--mostly--and I turn 18 next week, so what can they
say?”
“Ooh, are you getting gutsy all of a sudden?” Debbie teased, cracking
us all up--Lisa most of all.
“I love my parents, but they drive me nuts,” Lisa said. “Hey, I’m going
to college in, what, five months?” Lisa would be joining Michelle,
Debbie, Kenny and me at BC. “And I’m going to college with my
boyfriend. They going to watch over me then? Not hardly. So, they can
figure out now that I’m not the celibate little girl they think I am.”
“Good luck,” Kenny snorted, to laughter. “The only problem I have with
all that, honey, is you know damn well that if they figure out we’re
sleeping together, it will automatically become all my fault.”
“True,” Lisa said. “My parents are under the strange impression that
teenaged boys get horny, but teenaged girls don’t,” she laughed. “Don’t
worry, sweetie, if they figure it out, I’ll make sure they know what
the real story is.”
“Oh, I’d like to be a fly on the wall for that conversation,” Kenny
laughed. “’Mom and Dad, I have to tell you that your sweet little
daughter is a complete horndog.’ That one’s gonna go over real well!”
“Ah, well,” Lisa laughed. “Anyhow, count us in on the rooms.”
“OK, that’s three,” Stan said.
“Make it four,” Debbie piped up.
“Oh, God,” Michelle groaned. “You’re going to try to pick up someone?
At the prom? You shameless hussy.”
“Oh, you know a few guys, at least, will be going stag, so I’m sure I
could pick someone up without breaking any girls’ hearts,” Debbie said.
“But, no. This is a band thing. Those rooms have two beds. The other
one in my room belongs to our lead singer if he wants it.”
“Oh,” I said, surprised.
“That’s a good idea,” Michelle said. “Hey, we’re going to party in one
of the rooms right after the prom. Then we’ll go sleep it off. And do
other things. Especially if we’re Lisa!” Lisa broke up at that. “But
even if you’re not going to do other things, we really should all be
together.”
“You’re right. I’m in,” I said. “Thanks, Deb.”
“Don’t mention it.”
“I know it’s a sacrifice for you, not getting laid on prom night,” I
teased.
“Well, it’s a special night--why not do something different?” Deb
laughed.
“We should ask the hotel if we can keep the instruments in the ballroom
overnight--locked up, preferably,” Stan said.
“I’ll take care of it,” Kenny said.
JUNE 10th, 1982
Prom night.
It was the end of Senior Week. There had been a class picnic on Monday,
a trip to Canobie Lake Park--an amusement park in southern New
Hampshire--on Tuesday. Prom night was Thursday. It would be a busy
weekend--Win Craymore was having a graduation bash on Saturday up at
the Estate. We were playing it. Sunday was graduation. And, yes, my
speech was all set.
We’d gotten through the last month of school. Not without some
heartache for me--Livvie was parading around the school arm-in-arm with
her apparent prom date. Well, fuck it. My buddies pumped me up. I got a
few ‘keep your head up’ phone calls from Kara. Even Kelly came over to
me one day and asked how I was--that was nice. She was going to the
prom with a friend--”No big romance, but we’re friends and he says he
can dance!”--and was very glad we were playing it.
Senior week was fun--the band stuck together. Kenny was a bit at a
loss, since Lisa didn’t go to Cabot High. She’d be graduating a week
after us. “At least I get two proms,” Kenny laughed. But she wasn’t
around for senior week--even if Kenny had been able to get her in to
some of the stuff, it wouldn’t be possible, because this was her finals
week. At least, as she’d told us, she didn’t have any finals on Friday,
the day after the prom! But Kenny was a bit at a loss for the picnic
and the trip to Canobie Lake, so he hung out with Debbie and I. Our two
band couples were, of course, stuck to one another like glue!
Anyhow, that all ended--and it was prom night.
We got there in the afternoon to set up the equipment. After that was
done, we went to get ready.
We decided not to do the limos this time--the hotel rooms cost enough
money! So, after I got changed into the tux, I took my car to pick
Debbie up.
If anything, she looked better than last year! She’d gone for spaghetti
straps instead of sleeveless, but it was a nice rose-pink color. And,
as I said to her, “That’s some impressive cleavage on that dress!”
“Picked it out just for you,” she smirked.
Anyhow, her parents took the obligatory roll of pictures. Then we went
back to my house so my parents could take their roll. After that, it
was off to the prom.
We got to the prom, got those pictures taken, then found our table.
Stan and Michelle had beaten us there. The rest of the crew showed up
shortly thereafter. We ate, chatted a bit, and then it was time to
play.
Our collective classmates had a chuckle when they saw us getting up to
play outfitted in the traditional prom garb. So, I figured I’d say
something. “Hey folks, welcome to our grand experiment--figuring out if
you can play rock music dressed in tuxes and prom dresses!”
“Hey, if they can dance in ‘em, we can play in ‘em, right?” Stan said,
cracking everyone up.
“Good point,” I laughed. “Everybody ready? Here we go. One, two, three,
four....” And, with that, Debbie and I hit the opening riff to “Message
in a Bottle.”
We started off as usual--with “Message”, followed by “Prove it All
Night.” After that, Michelle’s first song of the night was now “Our
Lips Are Sealed,” though Debbie sang on it so much it was almost a
duet. It went over well, especially with all the girls there! Then back
to a couple of standbys. The first was “Here Comes My Girl.” I stepped
up to the mike and said, “You know what? I don’t have anyone to sing
this song to anymore. Ah, fuck it!” Debbie giggled--and pointed with
her eyes to Olivia, who was sitting at a table with her date looking
none too happy. I didn’t say what I said for her benefit--it just came
out. Ah, well--as I had just said, fuck it.
We did one slow song--and then Debbie stepped up to do “Angel of the
Morning.” She told me she wanted to get it over with early. She got a
round of applause when people realized she was gonna sing a song. But
when people realized what song, everything just stopped. Nobody was
talking, nobody was doing anything--nobody was even dancing. They were
all just watching Debbie, all unruffled dignity, play and sing her way
through that song. When she was done, the place exploded. And she
didn’t break down.
After that, we whipped through some familiar stuff--Because The Night,
Loving Feeling--and some stuff we’d just worked up. The Beatles’ song
this set was “Drive My Car.” In the second slow section, we put
“Tempted,” by Squeeze, a song I love singing. And we ended off the set
with me growling my way through the way-too-low-for-me “Pretty In
Pink.” I got through it anyhow !
We absolutely blew through that first set. It was 45 minutes and seemed
like about 10. It just flew by. We were damn hot that night.
It continued when we took the stage for the second set. We kicked that
set off with “The Waiting” into “Every Little Thing She Does Is Magic.”
We were absolutely nailing it--every note, everything. Then we
proceeded to nail “Tiny Dancer”--and, yes, keeping that in the set was
a little bit of a message to Olivia, since that was her favorite song.
After that, we did “God Only Knows”.
The second set, like the first, flew by. We did “Two Hearts”. We
absolutely nailed “Centerfold” by the J. Geils Band, after which Debbie
stepped to the mike and said, “You’ll all be singing that song about me
in ten years.” Michelle did a new Pretenders’ song, “Talk of the Town,”
and did one of her standbys, “Sara.” The new slow song in that set was
“Waiting For A Girl Like You” by Foreigner, which got a big cheer. The
Beatles’ song was “I Feel Fine.” After “Bang A Gong” and “Good Girls
Don’t,” we went into “867-5309,” which was one of the current big hits.
We ended the second set with ELO’s “Don’t Bring Me Down.”
“You know what?” Michelle said in between sets while we were gathered
at our table, “Tonight we might just be the greatest band in the world.”
“I know,” Debbie agreed. “It’s like magic. We found a gear I didn’t
even know we had.”
“Well, let’s go see if we can find another one, hm?” Stan said.
We kicked off the third set with a Journey song. Once the gang found
out I could sing “Open Arms,” they said we should add “Don’t Stop
Believin’” to the set. We started the third set off with it--and I
kicked ass, and got a big ovation. Michelle picked things up with “Only
The Lonely” by the Motels. After that, we did one near and dear to my
heart--”Cynical Girl,” by Marshall Crenshaw. It was the most obscure
thing in our whole setlist, but I loved it and enjoyed singing and
playing it.
We kept “Bette Davis Eyes” and “Cadillac Ranch” in the third set. We
added Huey Lewis’s “Do You Believe In Love.” Even though it was a prom,
we still did “Love Stinks,” which got a laugh. Then we ended the third
set with two new songs. First was an absolutely hellacious blast
through the Talking Heads’ “Once In A Lifetime.” Everybody danced, and
everyone went nuts. Then, we ended the set with “Under Pressure.”
Debbie absolutely wailed the Freddy Mercury part, and we left the stage
to raucous applause.
The final set got underway with another new song, “Since You’re Gone”
by the Cars. Most of the fourth set was the old stand-bys:
Dreams, Go Your Own Way, the 12-string set, When A Man Loves A Woman.
We tore through them.
The Big Finish kicked off with “She Loves You,” which got everyone
bopping along. We did “Brown Sugar” and “Born To Run,” as usual.
Michelle sang, “I Love Rock and Roll,” which went over very well. Then
we did the usual closing numbers, “Rock and Roll High School,” and
“What I Like About You.”
But, of course, we weren’t done.
“OK, folks, we’ve got one more. Since it’s the prom, we have to end
with one more slow dance, right? So, everybody on the dance floor.
Trust me, you all know this song!” Kenny hit the piano intro, and I
started right into “Open Arms.”
I absolutely completely fucking nailed it. I mean, not a fraction of a
note out of place. It might’ve been the most perfect vocal performance
of my life. Either life.
And, yes, Livvie noticed. Believe me, I saw the look on her face.
Everybody danced. When we were done, the applause was deafening.
Afterwards, Stan summed it up. “That was just about perfect.”
We all got together in Stan and Michelle’s room. Somehow Stan had
gotten his hands on a case of beer. With eight of us, that wasn’t a
lot, but it was enough to get mellow. We hung out for a while, just
chatting and rehashing the night. After a while, Kenny and Lisa went to
their room. Shortly thereafter, Karen and Dave did the same. Debbie and
I knew Michelle and Stan wanted to be alone, so we went to our room
right after Karen and Dave did.
“I have got to get out of this dress!” Debbie giggled the minute we got
to the room.
“I know what you mean,” I laughed, picking at my tux.
“I’ll take the bathroom, since it’ll take me longer.” She grabbed the
bag she had brought and took it to the bathroom. She came back out and
turned her back to me. “Before I go in there, could you help me with
this zip?”
“Sure,” I said, and unzipped her dress for her.
“Thanks. Be right back.”
She went into the bathroom, and I started getting out of my tux. After
a few minutes, I heard her call from the bathroom.
“Hey, Eddie. Do you believe in magic?”
Well, I couldn’t pass up an opening like that, could I? I immediately
started singing. “Do you believe in magic, in a young girl’s heart.....”
“Oh, stop it!” Debbie shouted, laughing, from the bathroom.
“Hey. You give a lead singer an opening like that, what do you expect?”
“OK,” she said, still in the bathroom. “Let me rephrase it, then. Do
you believe in the concept of a magical night? One where things that
aren’t supposed to happen do?”
“I dunno. What do you mean?”
“Well, I mean, like us, the band. Did you see what we did tonight? We
went to a place we’ve never been.”
“We’re getting better, Deb. We’re young, I’d expect us to get better as
time goes on,” I chuckled.
“Maybe. Or maybe the whole Prom thing got us to a level we couldn’t
have gotten to on our own. Maybe it was magic, a magic night.”
“Maybe.”
“Good,” she said. “Eddie? I don’t want the magic to end. Not yet.”
Before I could ask what she meant by that, the bathroom door opened,
and she stepped out.
Wearing a black babydoll nightie and matching panties that left very,
very little to the imagination. My jaw hit my chest!
“Well, how do I look?” she said, grinning.
“Stunning. Is this for me?”
“You betcha,” she said. She sat down on one of the beds. “I want a
night. I want tonight. We’ve joked about it enough. But this time I’m
serious. We’ll never be more than friends, we both know that--Michelle
was right, we’d kill each other,” she laughed. “But I want one night.
I’m unattatched--and so are you, for the moment. But I figure that
won’t last, so tonight it is.”
“You figure it won’t last? What, you think I’m going to find someone
else right away?” I laughed.
“Oh, I know you,” she said. “And I know Livvie, too. Now that she’s had
her big night at the prom--and did you notice her date wasn’t all that
interested in dancing? Boy, did that serve her right,” she giggled.
“Anyhow, since she had her big night, I predict she’s going to come
crawling back sometime this weekend. And you, because you are a
complete sap, will let her.”
“You think?”
“Tell me you won’t. Especially if she grovels.”
“It’d have to be a hell of a grovel.”
“Oh, she’ll pour it on. Anyhow, that’s my prediction. So, this is the
perfect chance for us to rip the sheets up together. I want it, and I’m
betting you do as well.”
“Well, if I didn’t before I saw that getup.....” I laughed.
“Good, it worked.”
“Sure did,” I agreed. “And, you’re right--we should do it at least
once. One problem, though--I don’t have anything.”
“Well, I’m on the pill, but I prefer a fail-safe anyhow. And since I
planned this....” She reached over into her purse and withdrew a box of
rubbers.
“I should’ve known,” I grinned.
“Good. Now get over here!”
I have to admit it--I wasn’t completely taken by surprise. Right when
Deb suggested we share a room after the prom, I knew that her doing
something like this was, at least, a possibility. All the jokes had an
undercurrent of seriousness in them, and I knew it. And, quite frankly,
that held true for jokes from me, too. Especially now that I was
single--I was attracted to Debbie physically. Always had been. And,
like she said, we were the best of friends. I don’t need to be in love
to have sex, but some emotional connection is necessary.
Debbie and I had one--as close friends and bandmates. Coupled with the
undeniable physical attraction--that was enough for me!
And I’m glad she’d brought condoms. AIDS was just starting to be talked
about--and at this point it was the ‘gay disease’--but I knew better.
And Debbie was promiscuous. Better safe than sorry--luckily, even
without knowing what AIDS was going to turn into, Deb agreed. I was
also glad she’d said that she preferred a fail-safe. I hope that was
always--I didn’t want anything nasty to happen to her either.
So, I let her lead me down the golden path, so to speak. We ended up in
a clinch on the bed, our tongues dueling as she rolled on top of me. I
reached up and slipped my hand under that nightie, so I could get my
hand on one of those impressive boobs.
“My goodness, you’re built,” I said.
“I could say the same,” she laughed, running her hand up and down my
bicep. I almost cracked up at that--thinking that she never would’ve
been able to say that the first time around!
I reached for the hem of her nightie. “I wanna see those things,” I
laughed.
“You and every other guy in school.”
I abruptly stopped--thinking of her history, and all the reasons she
chose to sing “Angel of the Morning” tonight. I took a breath, and
looked at her. “Deb, if you’re going to lump me in with all the rest of
those guys, we’re not going to do this. I think more of you than that,
and I don’t want you to forget that.”
She smiled at me. “Eddie, I know that. And, no, I do not and will not
lump you in with the rest of them. You’re a friend, a true friend. You
realize this is the first time I’ve ever gone to bed with someone I
really truly liked as a person? Hell, I’ve rarely been to bed with
someone I really knew as a person. So, no, this is different. A lot
different.”
“OK,” I smiled.
“But, you have to admit,” she giggled, “around Cabot High, my tits are
sort of a tourist attraction.”
“Well, I can see why,” I chuckled. I reached down again and quickly
stripped her nightie off. And gasped. “Shit., now I can really see why!”
“They are my best asset,” she said.
“No, dear. They’re not. That’d be the ability to play every instrument
known to man,” I said. She grinned at that, pleased. “These are quite
impressive, however.” Whereupon I leaned over and took one into my
mouth.
“Oooh!” she shrieked, and started wiggling under my ministrations. I
drubbed her nipple with my mouth, getting a nice yelp for my troubles.
As I kept up nibbling on her boob, something became quickly
apparent--this was gonna be loud. Not that I minded, but we were in a
hotel!
After a bit of tongue work on her boob--and a lot of yelps and
wheezes--I pulled off. “Well, that gives the lie to the cliche.”
“What cliche?” she asked.
“The one that says that the smaller ones are more responsive.”
“Oh, God, not in my case,” she laughed.
“I noticed.” I went back to work, getting more happy yelps. While I did
that, I gently slipped a hand under her panties. Boy, was she soaked!
“Hold up a minute,” she said just after she started panting. “You need
to...wait a minute. First, get up here.” I lifted my face to
hers--whereupon she kissed the living daylights out of me.
“Wow,” I said after she broke the kiss.
“Thank you,” she laughed. “Now. The reason I told you to stop in the
first place.” I was wearing my usual sleeping attire--a tee shirt and
shorts--and she started tugging on the hem of my tee shirt. “I want you
naked,” she giggled.
“Well...” I said, and reached down for her panties.
“One at a time,” she laughed. “Let me.” She got my tee shirt off, then
reached for my shorts.
OK, I guess I was never going to get over my self-consciousness about
my less-that-prodigious size. And it was worse with a girl as
experienced as Deb was. Luckily, she didn’t seem to care--considering
she looked at it and said, “Yum!”
“Thanks,” I said. “Now let me have my yum,” I said, and reached again
for her panties. She laughed and lifted her hips to help me out.
“Blonde all over,” I commented.
“What, you thought it was from a bottle?”
“No, but this clinches it. Now shut up and kiss me again.”
“Gladly,” she said, and then she did. Her hand reached down and grabbed
my dick at the same time that mine moved down to gently fondle her
pussy. Her mouth opened to let my tongue in. She moaned into my mouth
as I rubbed her pussy. After a few minutes of that, I broke away from
her mouth and went for her boob again.
“Oh, that feels wonderful,” she moaned, “but I hope you’re going to
keep going lower.”
I grinned up at her. “No blushing violet you.”
“Well, I do remember you once bragging to me how good you were at that.
So I’m just expecting you to put your money where your mouth is.”
“Put your pussy where my mouth is, you mean,” I quipped, cracking her
up. “Don’t worry, I’ll get to it. I like to savor the appetizer before
I move onto the entree.”
“Funny, I thought pussy-eating was the appetizer.”
“That’s because you’ve never had me do it to you.”
“Oh, this better be good!”
“You just wait. Trust me.” And with that, I went back to her boob.
“OK, I admit it,” she gasped. “If you’re as good at that as you are at
this...” I just grinned to myself and kept at her boobs.
I didn’t want to keep her waiting too long, however, so after a couple
more minutes at her boob, I started kissing my way down her stomach.
She sighed happily and spread her legs. I took my time going down her
stomach--I loved doing that--but I was heading directly for paydirt the
whole time. I thought about skipping by and going for a knee as a
tease, but she was squirming so much by that point I think she would’ve
killed me!
So, I didn’t dawdle. From the first lick up her pussy, she was
shuddering. And, boy, was she wet! Her juices completely covered my
tongue from the first pass! Not that I minded.
Seeing how worked up she was, I only went up and down her pussy lips a
couple of times, before I headed for her very prominent clittie. I
hadn’t realized how big it was until I bumped it with my tongue. Jesus!
This was by far the biggest clit I’d ever encountered, in either life.
No wonder she was so damn horny--what with this thing to satisfy! After
a couple of bumps with my tongue, I was able to wrap my lips right
around it and suck.
It quickly became very apparent that my prediction--that she was going
to be loud--was right on. The minute my lips wrapped around that
clittie, the volume started increasing. When I drummed my tongue on her
clit while sucking on it, the screeches began to approach a crescendo.
Shit, I think that one was audible in downtown Boston!
I let her come down from that one--and went for two. “Oh, God, again?”
she yelped.
“You betcha,” I told her, and dove back in. Since she’d gotten a good
one, I meant to savor this one. So, I eased off her clit, so she’d come
down some, and went back to nuzzling my tongue into her labia.
She was still running like a river, and squirming like a trapped cat.
And the yelps were starting up again. But I still took my time,
savoring her juices as I lapped up and down her pussy. After a few, I
stopped at the bottom and stuck my tongue into her opening, producing a
nice wriggle-and-screech.
You know what? This was fun! She was responsive and willing and eager
and all that good stuff. And she was clearly enjoying my attention.
I pulled out of her opening and resumed dragging my tongue up and down
her labia. After a few strokes, I went for her clit. I kept that up,
nudging her prominent clit with my tongue every third stroke or so,
working her back up. When the yelping started to get more pronounced, I
zeroed in on her clit, keeping at it until she screamed out her next
orgasm.
I crawled up next to her on the bed while she came down from that one.
After a few minutes, she opened her eyes, looked over at me, and
grinned. “OK. You weren’t lying. You are damn good at that.”
“Told you.”
“Yes, you did,” she laughed. “And, you know, I’ve been told I’m pretty
good at reciprocating that bit.”
“Oh, really?”
“Definitely,” she said. And, before I knew it, she was leaning over me
with my dick in her mouth.
OK, she wasn’t whistling Dixie. She was damn good. She used just the
right amouth of pressure, and knew when to back off from the head and
work the shaft. She bobbed up and down on my dick for a while, then
backed off and lapped at the head. Then back to the bobbing.
She knew her shit. It’s not the easiest thing for me to cum from
a blowjob--I came in absolutely no time from Deb’s efforts.
“Uh-oh, I killed it.” she said after she’d swallowed.
“That won’t last long,” I laughed. “C’mon up here and give us a kiss.”
“I still got sperm-breath.”
“Like I care?” I laughed. “Besides which, I still got all your pussy
drippings on my chin.”
“Goody!” she giggled, and then kissed the daylights out of me again.
She ended up on top of me, kissing, and we were just kind of fondling
and rubbing bodies together. A few minutes of her nipples drilling into
my chest--not to mention her hand rubbing away at my dick--and I was at
full-staff.
“Told you,” I said.
“Yes, you did,” she agreed with a laugh. She reached over to the table
and grabbed one of the condoms she’d brought. I thought she’d hand it
to me, but she didn’t. She broke open the wrapper and pulled it out,
then she reached down for my dick.
“Oh, how helpful,” I teased.
“Just an excuse for me to get my hand on your dick,” she teased back.
“Like you need an excuse,” I countered.
She laughed. “Damn, you’re fun in bed.”
“Sex is supposed to be fun, right?”
“In theory. Most guys are either just concerned with their own orgasm,
or they’re all nervous.”
“I’m not nervous because this certainly isn’t close to my first time,
and also because we’re friends. As for the other thing--if that’s all I
wanted, I could just jerk off.”
She laughed. “You sure you’re a guy?”
“Positive. And since I’m all ready, all you have to do is lie back and
you’ll know for sure I’m a guy.”
“Goody!” she laughed, and got herself situated on the bed. I hovered
over her, and slipped right into her.
“Mmmmmm,” she hummed as I hit bottom. “Oh, that’s good.” Whereupon I
made sure to grind myself on her clit--and her little hum got a lot
louder and rose three octaves!
I started a slow and steady pace. Debbie obviously liked it, what with
all the “Oh, Eddie!” squealing I was getting. When I sensed she was
getting into it, I picked up the pace.
Her vocalizations went right with me. “Oh! Oh! OH! OH! OOOOOOOHHH!
EDDIE! EDDDEEEEEEEEEE!”
Man, I hoped this hotel room was soundproofed!
Since she’d given me a blowjob not long before, I knew I could last a
while. So, she beat me across the finish line. And if there had been a
glass in the room, it would have shattered!
Jeez. I’d been with some girls that voiced their pleasure
enthusiastically, but Debbie absolutely took the cake. No wonder she
was a complete nymphomaniac.
After she came, I slowed down for a bit to let her catch her breath.
Then I started up again.
“Oooooh!” she gasped. “More? You stud!” I just grinned at her and kept
going. She howled out her second before I got there.
I collapsed beside her and she crawled into my arms, still breathing
heavy.
“Boy,” she said after she caught her breath. “That was great. I usually
don’t get to two from that. And four altogether is just about unheard
of.”
“Stamina’s my strong suit.”
“That’s a good strong suit to have,” she giggled. “Though, I have to
tell you, that’s not your number one strong suit.”
“What is?”
“Tempo,” she laughed. “You know exactly when to speed up and when to
slow down and all. You fuck like a rhythm guitarist.”
I cracked up. “Well, that’s good, because you orgasm like a soprano.”
“True, all true. Michelle and Stan are in the next room, aren’t they?”
I nodded. “Yeah, well, we’re gonna get grilled. Because I bet they
heard me.”
“I think the whole hotel heard you.”
“I’m not shy.”
“No, you are not.”
“Eddie? Thanks. I’m so glad we did this. It was everything I’d
expected.”
“Ditto, and ditto.”
We curled up together under the blankets.
“Sing me to sleep,” she said.
I thought for a minute--and then launched into “Crazy Love.” She
giggled through the first verse--and then picked up the harmony on the
second.
We fell asleep right after.
JUNE 11th, 1982
I woke up to find Debbie sprawled all over me. I didn’t mind at all.
Well, I wouldn’t have minded if I didn’t have to pee. And she was
completely on top of me. I had to gently wake her up so I could go to
the bathroom.
When I got back, she was lying on the pillow--still stark naked, as was
I--and blinking at me sleepily. “Sorry,” I said to her, “but you were
right on top of me and I really had to go.”
“I know,” she said, and then yawned. “Time is it?”
“Eight.”
“We’re meeting the rest of them for breakfast?”
“At 9:30.”
“Good, that gives us a half-hour to shower and get dressed.”
“Your math is off, it’s an hour and a half.”
“No, because I have plans for that first hour. Get back in this bed.”
“Oh, twist my arm,” I laughed, and crawled back into the bed.
After another roll in the hay for the first hour, and a rather fun
mutual-shower, we headed down to breakfast, arm-in-arm.
“Regrets?” she asked.
“Not a one,” I said. “Look, I’m partially to blame for Olivia and I
breaking up. I know that. But we did break up, and she was with someone
else last night at the prom, right?”
“You think she did something else besides go to the prom last night?”
“Don’t know--and more importantly I don’t really care. And I don’t mean
that in a callous way--it’s just not my business anymore.”
“Even if you guys get back together?”
“Yeah. When you’re together, you’re together--but when you’re not,
you’re not. That’s the way I look at it.”
“Good. I want to make sure this doesn’t affect our friendship. And if
you had regrets....”
“No worries, Deb. Nothing will affect our friendship.”
“That’s what I wanted to hear.”
We got down to breakfast and met up with the rest of the guys. And,
yes, Michelle quizzed us--because she’d heard the screaming!