When you are, let’s be generous and say “tentative” around
women, it is not helpful for an interloping “Squelcher” to show up at exactly
the wrong time and gum up the opportunity that has somehow miraculously fallen
into your lap.
But that’s exactly what we had at our camp. In the form of an infuriating, insinuating
camp director named Joe.
Joe had the, perhaps self-created, reputation of
materializing exactly where and when you did not want him to, squelching what
was looking “really good” and obliterating the possibility of “one of the
greatest moments in my life.” No wonder
he was not entirely beloved.
Things happened at came.
Because it was camp. No parents,
and young people in “heat.” Joe’s
mission was to keep that “heat” under control.
The camp’s reputation – among the parents, not the counselors – was on the line. “Hey, you can do stuff out there” was not the reputation that the parents were
looking for. They were looking for “It’s
safe, and it’s clean”, “clean” meaning that campers would not see anything that
would ever give them nightmares. Or
ideas.
The penalty for such forbidden activities was severe. As a camper, on more than one occasion, my
counselor had been sent home in “mid-season” for what was euphemistically
described to the campers as “family troubles.”
Whose family, was never
entirely made clear.
But now I’m a counselor, aged nineteen or twenty. I’m on “Night Duty” with Mary Jo, a safely
insulating pseudonym, because no Mary Jo ever attended our camp. “Night Duty” was a rotating responsibility
involving the after hours supervision of the unit, patrolling counselors
available in case of unexpected emergencies, or bedwetting.
Normally, a male and female counselor would not serve on
“Night Duty” together. The “Girls” side
was on the opposite side of the camp from the “Boys” side, the female
counselors serving “Night Duty” for the “Girls” cabins, male counselors for the
“Boys.”
The exception was the Junior Unit, ages six to nine, where
the boys’ and girls’ cabins were integrated, thus integrating the “Night Duty”
patrollers as well. That’s how I, through
a happenstance in scheduling, wound up partnered on “Night Duty” with Mary Jo.
Here’s the thing.
This is uncomfortable for me to write.
So you’ll be seeing narrative gaps and deflecting euphemisms. Please excuse the indirectness. But that is the only way I can write this.
Okay, how can I say this?
Earier that summer, during a Junior unit-wide evening
activity of “Bingo”, which Mary Jo and I were in charge of running, with me
reading the numbers – “G – 48”; “O – 72”, and Mary Jo standing uncomfortably
close to me repeating them, in front of fifty young children and their
counselors, Mary Jo made a move which, if you were blind or totally
inexperienced, you could still see was a signal that virtually everything in
the…”inter-genderal” activities department, was unquestionably on the table.
That’s the best I can do with that. The “move” was surprising. It was wonderful. And it was wrong. Which is what made it wonderful.
FLASH FORWARD:
IT IS 11 P.M., ABOUT A WEEK OR SO LATER.
Mary Jo and I are alone together on “Night Duty”, sitting
side by side on a bench situated on the front porch of my cabin. Though we had never spoken about it, there is
the history of “The Bingo Incident” between us.
The night is cold. I
suggest a blanket. My suggestion is
accepted. I exit into the cabin,
emerging holding a large woolen blanket, lifted from my bed. We wrap ourselves in the blanket, the move
drawing us inevitably closer together.
We are sitting there on “Night Duty”, wrapped in the blanket,
me at least, if not her as well, uncertain of the next move. But the situation is electric. A move, of some sort,
is inevitable.
But before one can be made, “The Squelcher” appears out of
nowhere, and, despite my lame excuse – “We’re cold, Joe” – insists on separate
blankets.
And the moment is lost.
Forever.
That’s how you get the reputation as “The Squelcher.” Maybe it wasn’t
self-created. Maybe he just
instinctively knew.
A couple of weeks later, there was a scheduled Eclipse of
the Sun. To protect the eyes of the
campers who might, out of curiosity, look up, the entire camp – everybody, campers
and staff – were herded into the Dining Hall, required to do I don’t know what
in there, until the Eclipse of the Sun was over.
The reason “I don’t know what” was because, having an
imminent show to prepare for, I was excused from the Dining Hall internment to
work in the office, putting the finishing touches on the script. It was not just me, it was me and a young counselor assigned as my typist,
Yolanda, also not her real name, nor even suggestive
of her real name, as there are few to none – at our camp at least – Jewish Yolandas.
Yolanda and I, although acquaintances, had never come anywhere
close to experiencing the move that
Mary Jo had pulled off during “Bingo Night.”
But if there was a move to be made, even just a preliminary one, this
was definitely the time.
It was a sweltering hot day. I wore some lightweight shorts, Yolanda, an
attractive red bathing suit. And there
you had it. The situation-assuring
privacy, the attractive red bathing suit, the single droplet of perspiration on
Yolanda’s upper lip as she typed… I mean, come on, now. I’m only human.
It was now or never.
“It Happened During The Solar Eclipse.”
It seemed the ideal summer blockbuster for 1965.
Nothing happened.
Why not?
The terror of “The Squelcher.”
That may be an excuse.
Rejection is even harder to survive than squelching. But you have to believe me. Despite the situation, in which simply going
outside courted permanent blindness, there was the, albeit unlikely,
possibility…
That we would nevertheless be interrupted.
So not a thing took place.
There was no “move” whatsoever.
Yolanda kept typing. And I tried
to distract myself as best as I could, never entirely escaping my original
impulse.
Five minutes later, the office door flies open.
And in comes “The Squelcher.”
I do not, of course, know how either of those situations would
have turned out. But I do know this. Were it not for “The Squelcher”, I could
close my eyes today and think back on those memorable moments…
Man, I hate that guy.
1 comment:
Wow. I don't know what else to say. So I won't.
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