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Authors: Steve Kluger

My Most Excellent Year (37 page)

BOOK: My Most Excellent Year
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The train ride home was a lot quieter than the first one was. I bought cookies and milk for Hucky at the snack bar, but he nodded off just a couple of seconds after we’d gotten back to our seats. Who wouldn’t have? He’d put in a long day. And if I’d known what was good for me, I’d have caught some Z’s too—I had an algebra test in nine hours that I really needed to be awake for.

Speaking of algebra, I think I figured out the part that Lori forgot to tell me. Okay, maybe
x
and
y
do
have specific values—but they mean different things to different people. Pop’s
x
and
y
add up to taking care of me and falling in love with Lori. Alé’s add up to making her own decisions and falling in love with me (we hope). Augie’s add up to Katharine Hepburn and loving Andy and always being there for me. And mine add up to Mama, Pop, Augie, Alé, Hucky, Mom, Dad, Phyllis, Buck Weaver, and anyone else who finds a place inside my heart. So I was right to bring Hucky to New York after all. And Pop was also right to be pissed off at me for doing it. We just need to work out our third variables.

I don’t know if that’s going to help me on my algebra test, but seeing as it’s been February 16 for the past fifty-two minutes, it’s not a bad way to turn fifteen.

I glanced down at Hucky, who was out like a light—with his head on my chest and my arm wrapped around him. And for the very first time I saw something I’d never seen before while he was sleeping. A smile.

I love you,

T.C.

L
AURENTS
S
CHOOL

B
ROOKLINE
, M
ASSACHUSETTS

VIA E-MAIL

Dear Ted:

Before you come to any hasty decisions, remember what the venerable W. S. Gilbert wrote in
The Mikado
. “Let the punishment fit the crime.”

Your son makes dreams come true for others. And not just ordinary dreams either. Hucky met Mary Poppins, and now she’s a part of his life. I still don’t know for certain whether I’m merely awed or green with envy. If that had happened to me when
I
was six, I might have turned out with a few screws tighter than they are now. At the very least, I wouldn’t have been idiot enough to date that treasonous quisling Wes Kibel in high school, and I may even have been more cavalier in my dealings with the noxious concept of purloined court-side seats.

Since there’s a slim chance that I might have a future say in the care and feeding of Anthony, I’m recommending leniency. I know he shattered a few dozen rules in order to pull off the improbable—but so did Rosa Parks. In other words, if you give him a hard time, I’ll break your neck.

Lori

K
ELLER
C
ONSTRUCTION

BOSTON • GLOUCESTER • WALTHAM

ELECTRONIC TRANSMISSION

Dear Lori:

I hated
The Mikado
.
H.M.S. Pinafore
was more up my alley. I saw it in tenth grade, and our Buttercup was
hot
.

Don’t worry. Tony C may have scared the shit out of me, but if I had to balance that against how proud I am (and, not incidentally, how proud his mother would have been), there’s no contest. So he’ll be grounded for four weeks, but without loss of Internet or cell phone privileges. This is like sending a condemned man to San Quentin but taking all the bars off first.

By the way, I prefer you with your screws loose. But if you can find out where Wes is living these days, I’ll stop over there myself and rough him up for you.

Ted

English Assignment

Augie Hwong, 11
th
Grade

Ms. LaFontaine’s Class

MY MOST EXCELLENT YEAR

Conclusion

After
Kiss Me, Kate
, everybody knew that Alé was going places, but no one was prepared for her professional debut as Kim McAfee
in
Bye Bye Birdie
at the Lyric Stage. God, when she changed into a floppy sweater and baseball cap while she sang “How Lovely to Be a Woman,” you could practically feel the paint melting off the walls. The
Herald
called her “the find of the year,” and she was nominated for Best Supporting Actress in a Musical by the
Boston Phoenix
.

INSTANT MESSENGER

AugieHwong:
When are you going to teach me the moves?

AlePerez:
You’re
not
understudying me. So please stay away from the auditions. They may just cast you. And I can’t afford the competition.

Actually, I’ve come to terms with the fact that the parts I was born to play are forever out of reach (especially Roxie Hart). That’s why I’ve decided to become a director/choreographer instead. We rule, we rock, and we also get to perform all of the roles first while we’re teaching them to our actors. Last year I directed a frosh/soph production of
Follies
, and no one who was at rehearsal will ever forget the way my “Story of Lucy and Jessie” turned Alexis Smith into a dim memory from a fading past.

And speaking of
Follies
, Mom may not write a theatre column anymore, but that doesn’t mean she’s retired her poison pen. She recently contributed a commentary to the op-ed page blasting Stephen Sondheim for his stubborn refusal to allow anyone to
cast a same-sex couple in
Company
. “And this is supposed to be a musical about contemporary relationships??” (She never found out what his sentiments were after she called him “the Roy Cohn of composers,” but I’m pretty sure they weren’t “thank you.”) She also wrote a feature article on the three of us and Hucky, and now every stage doorman in New York has to deal with gate-crashing bogus relatives. Carol Channing’s son even got arrested, and all he was trying to do was pick up his mom and take her home.

Andy and I stayed boyfriends until last spring, and then we decided we were too young for a serious commitment. So even though we knew we’d be friends forever, we broke up for our own good. It lasted twenty-five minutes.

www.augiehwong.com

PRIVATE CHAT

AndyWexler:
Spidey, what’s a “wild oat” anyway?

AugieHwong:
I don’t know. I think it’s just a figure of speech.

AndyWexler:
Then why are we supposed to sow them?

AugieHwong:
Nobody explained that part to me. Just because, that’s why. By the way, I still smile when you call me “Spidey.” It reminds me of the old days.

AndyWexler:
When—this morning?!

He finally told his parents, who weren’t exactly surprised. As a
general rule, when your son’s had a boyfriend for almost two years, it usually means he’s gay. They’ve come over for dinner a couple of times now, which means we have
three
people glued to the couch whenever the Patriots are on ESPN: Dad, Andy, and Andy’s mom. Mr. Wexler is probably the only pilot American Airlines employs who doesn’t have much use for football. His game is lacrosse, which he taught me during sophomore year. I’m a wing. And the uniforms are like
SO
hot.

Mateo was adopted by a deaf couple in Back Bay (she’s a teacher, he’s an author), but he and Hucky stayed best friends through all of the changes. And right after they’d both turned seven, Tick and I taught them the games they most needed to know: secret agents, astronauts, Galaxy Fighters, and brothers. “Brothers” seems to be their favorite—at 8½, they’re still playing it. Incidentally, when I got really proficient at ASL, I made Hucky sit still long enough for
All About Eve
while I signed it for him. He gave up in disgust halfway through it.

“What a ripoff!”
he fumed.
“They stole the whole ginky thing from the Tooth Fairy story! How do these people get
away
with that??”

INSTANT MESSENGER

TCKeller:
I just checked out Brandeis online. They’ve got a theatre department for you and a poli sci department for me. What do you think?

AugieHwong:
Andy’s going to be at B.U. and Alé’s going to be at Emerson. Brandeis is too far.

TCKeller:
According to Yahoo, it’s 7.8 miles. What did you want, dude—walking distance??

AugieHwong:
Yes.

I figured out something in ninth grade that I should have known at six, when I chose a brother who could teach me how to be Augie Hwong. Up until then, I was definitely the wrong actor for the part (Lea Salonga would have been
so
much more appropriate), but we worked with what we had. And after Tick brought Hucky into our lives and I watched what happened, I figured out that it’s not just the people we love, but the people we let love us
back
who show us how high we can really soar.

From:
[email protected]

To:
[email protected]

Boston University is okay, but only if you don’t have to live there. You can still come home at night, can’t you? Because I’m not old enough to know right from wrong yet without brothers to show me. Even when they go to college. I could get in a lot of trouble by myself, you know.

Pop and T.C. gave me a time out because I microwaved my Disk Man to dry it off from falling in the sink and getting soaping wet. How was I suppose to know it would make all the lights go out?

So I’m changing my name to Hucky Hwong again. Just until the weekend. It was Nehi’s idea and I like it.

Last fall, Alé was one of the three leads up at Merrimack Rep in Stephen Sondheim’s
Merrily We Roll Along
(sorry, Mom), and for some weird reason I found myself crying when she sang “Old Friends”—ironically, one of only eight happy songs that Sondheim ever wrote. It made me remember conning her into the talent show, rehearsing
Kiss Me, Kate
with her, sitting over Mass Pike with Tick and getting each other through puberty, Christmas shopping with Aunt Babe, Dad’s heart-to-hearts with me about Andy, my boyfriend’s first kiss (and not recovering from it for three weeks), Hucky on skis, and the way Julie Andrews came through for us. So if I have to end on a quote—and baby, Augie Hwong
always
ends on a quote—I’m sticking with Sondheim.

“Here’s to us.

Who’s like us?

Damn few.”

BOOK: My Most Excellent Year
5.2Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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