The bus sputtered down Almond Drive, farting out all sorts of grunts and wheezes. She was an old girl, all right, number 66. Even older than Bill himself, our silver-haired driver. He was retired, years removed from another career, another life. But this was no way to spend the golden years. Carting around a bunch of peckerheads, glaring steely-eyed through the rearview mirror, barking at ‘em to ‘keep your hands inside!’ and ‘knock it off!’ Poor bastard. Probably stews on the fact he should have chosen a better line of work the first go round. Probably yearns to ram this yellow bucket into the nearest pond, take us down with him. After all, we didn’t know the horrors of the world. We didn’t know the pain… but hold on- wait… why let the lil’ weasels check out on a high note? Fuck ‘em. Let ‘em grow old, they’ll see. They’ll see for themselves. He snickered, pleased with his latest thought. So pleased he nearly barreled through the stop sign at the bottom of the hill.
My head jerked forward, slamming into the thin, green seat in front of me. I’m sure the old sonofabitch snickered again, despite suffering whiplash himself. I’ll take ’em down with me. But all I heard was the whoosh, the airy sound of the doors, those twin portals of freedom, spreading wide its rubber coated wings. Whoosh. I imagine that’s the sound the heavenly gates make when they welcome in the latest inductee.
I scurried down the aisle, weaving past slower, less motivated students, a tailback hitting the hole. For some reason, they didn’t share my haste. Didn’t they know this was the first Monday of the month? That a teacher’s conference closed down the school an hour early? That it’s now 2:15 instead of 3:15?… They knew. Of course they knew. They just didn’t have anything to do, that’s all. Nothing important, anyway. They were merely grateful for the truncated schedule, a reprieve from that dreaded last hour of class when the clock all but freezes. No, they’d be content to fritter away the early dismissal with cartoons or video games. That’s what ten-year-olds do (well, at least they did in 1983, the time of this story). Most of them, anyway. My friends and I were more prudent. We knew there was only one way to milk the bonus frame.
Channel 27. Just the mention of it sounds dirty. Filthy. Not be uttered in respectable company. The local TV guide labeled it ‘gaiety/nudity.’ Thankfully, I never saw any evidence of ‘gaiety,’ but there sure was an abundance of the latter. And I’m not talking teasing glimpses of flesh, a sliver of breast here, a slice of bush there. I’m talking porn, raw and nasty, pumped right into split-level suburbia, behind all those picket fences. As I later discovered, my town in eastern Pennsylvania was only one of two in the entire country whose basic cable package included the hard stuff. There it was, pornography, a third class citizen, sharing the stage with the HBO’s and ESPN’s of the world, mingling freely, without discrimination, without barriers. It was beautiful.
Like any good thing, though, there were limits. Actual content aired just three times a day: one in the morning, one in the afternoon, and nine at night. The rest of the schedule was slated for snow, the salt and peppery kind with the ear piercing hum. For me, the late night viewing was out of the question. There was simply no justification for sneaking downstairs at that hour, especially with the creaky steps alerting my every footfall. I suppose Christmas morning would provide a plausible excuse, but that’s hardly the time to indulge in prepubescent fantasies. So the 1 a.m. show was out. So, too, was the nine o’clock feature. That was prime time, a slot reserved for mainstream fare, be it a sitcom, drama, or, Monday nights in the fall, a football game. Not that I would choose any of those options over porn. I wouldn’t. But there was only one cable box in the house and my mom had veto power. This was her time to unwind, to ‘catch up’ on her shows. None of these, to my knowledge, included the slightest hint of anal penetration. God help me if they did.
That left the matinee. For nine months a year, school precluded this option. The presence of my parents ruled out any weekend viewing. The lone shot we had was early dismissal. Occasionally, a snowstorm did the trick. Problem was, if the conditions were severe enough, my mother would skip work (my dad, never) and stay at home. Besides, if there was ample snow on the ground, other activities like tobogganing or ice hockey or even a good snowball fight took precedence. After all, we were kids. Only on the first Monday of the month did we act otherwise.
By the time Ralph dawdled into the house, we were already hunkered down in our positions. They were as natural and irrevocable to us as the seating arrangement in class. Ruch stood a few feet from the TV, clenching the remote, his trigger quick fingers on the ready. His main duty was to bury evidence if enemy troops should ambush. His more immediate function was to handle volume control, boosting the soft ahhhs and tempering the shrill uggghs. He had a certain talent for it.
Jeff, Raab, and I shared the couch while Chad, my next door neighbor, knelt down in the corner of the living room. This unusual stance served two functions: first, it gave him an advantage should he be forced to flee; second, and far more importantly, it concealed his erection. For the rest of us, a strategically placed throw pillow on the crotch did the trick. Of course, we’d never admit to having a boner, let alone covering one up. You’d think it’d only be humiliating if you didn’thave one, but that rationale never seeped into our collective minds. An erection was our scarlet letter, a damning sign not of moral turpitude, but of weakness. Plain, utter weakness. And to a fourth grader, there was nothing worse than that.
The blonde cheerleader whipped off her blue and white skirt- so casual, so quick- and tossed it aside. There was nothing underneath. Just a triangle, a splotch of dark brown hair… huh, that’s weird. Yellow on top, brown below. I was perplexed, baffled by the mysteries of adulthood. I knew I wasn’t the only one stung by this enigma, but naturally, no one uttered a word. Ignorance of such matters fell just beneath weakness on the wuss scale.
The guy’s head was right smack in the triangle, obliterating it. His tongue was going to town, left, right, north, south, an alley cat lapping a saucer of fresh milk. What in the world’s down there? Must be good, whatever it is. Look at him go! Bet it tastes like chocolate down there. Vanilla, actually. Leave chocolate for the black girls. Hey, maybe different girls had different flavors. How cool would that be! Sample ‘em all. All- wait, that’s a lot of flavors. Way too many. I mean, geez, just the Chinese alone…
The cheerleader was emitting strange noises, as if she was in pain. Was that creep hurting her? Cancel that, she just smiled. She likes it! Now she’s asking- Christ, begging!- for more. Deeper, harder. Man, oh man, I never carried on like that before, not even when the Phillies won the World Series. Would I ever? You know, now that I look at him, the guy, he’s kind of pudgy. Sorta ugly, too, with that potbelly and that bushy mustache. And old. Older than my dad even. I could get a hotter girl than that, I’m sure. When I get the chance I’m gonna do this every freakin’ day. You watch.
I heard the crunch. The sound of tires rolling over pebbles. I had the only driveway in the neighborhood that wasn’t covered with macadam- just loose stones, millions of ‘em. But I wasn’t complaining, far from it. For once, my dad’s cheapness paid off. The crunch was our alarm system, tried and true.
Chad sprung to his feet with military quickness. Ruch flicked the channel. The moans morphed into mild applause, the cheerleader to a cowboy, the locker room to a rodeo pit (these were the early days of ESPN when third tier sports dominated the programming schedule).
“Jesus Christ! It’s just someone turning around,” Ralph said, his right hand buried deep in a bag of knockoff Doritos. The cessation of the crunch confirmed Ralph was right. But paranoia had not just become an accepted mindset, it was de riguer. Fact of the matter was we couldn’t take any chances. Not anymore, not after the incident. Last summer, on a muggy August afternoon, Jeff and I got busted.
My mom was in the kitchen, chopping carrots for some sort of Hungarian stew. Jeff and I were down in the living room, sprawled out on the carpet, a few feet in front of the TV. We had grown so comfortable, so brazen in partaking of our sinful habit, we deemed ourselves impervious to capture. The culprit was Candie Goes to Hollywood. Sweet, sweet Candie, fresh in town to pursue an acting career. And those scummy producers with the potbellies and bushy mustaches. They didn’t deserve her… her and those tanned legs… those perky tits… that holy triangle. Deeper, harder, indeed.
The stairs creaked. Jeff shot me a look. Quick, quick. I should have clicked the remote. But I stalled. Not out of panic, but pride. Stupid, stupid pride. I waited for one more pelvic thrust, one more oh, god! Only when my mom’s red socks were in plain view did I change the channel. I punched two buttons, the first two my fingers found. There were so many goddamn stations, even in 1983, surely I’d land on one.
A buzz blasted out of the TV. The screen, black and white. “I know what you’re watching,” my mom said. My twitchy fingers punched two more keys. A louder hum. I made the mistake of looking up. Her face was wrangled in an expression of motherly angst that I’d never seen before.
“I’m telling dad.”
“What?” I replied weakly. I was doomed. I knew it. Jeff knew it. My mom sure as hell knew it. But my pride, the guilty party itself, wouldn’t allow such an abject surrender.
I flicked on ABC’s Wide World of Sports, then cranked up the volume. Two seconds later, I switched back to the dead channel- on purpose. My hope was that my mother would hear the hum and think, ah, so that’s it. He’s not a pervert, bless his heart. He’s just bad with the remote. My whole case rested on it.
Jeff and I suffered no recriminations. Not because I duped my mom or because she held her tongue. No such luck, on both counts. The truth was my parents weren’t comfortable discussing the issue. Son, what you were watching was naughty. My dad would never utter those words, not in a thousand years. He just wasn’t the type. Laborers in cement plants usually aren’t. He wasn’t one to dish out fatherly platitudes, never gave me the talk. Once, in high school, he broke the usual silence at the dinner table by saying, “I don’t wanna hear about you using drugs.” He even pointed his fork when he said it. But that was it, that was his big speech. It took less than three seconds.
While I escaped punishment, the remote control wasn’t so fortunate. The first victim was the number 7. It was yanked out like a rotten bicuspid. This cruel act of vengeance proved feckless. All we had to do now was press 26, then the + key. Voila! Porn again, naturally. My dad was no fool, he knew. A week later he sentenced another key to its death, rooting out the 2. We were not deterred. Like any criminal worth his salt, we discovered the loophole: hit 30, then the – button. No one could keep Candie from us, not without a bare knuckled brawl. My father, though, was a determined foe. I imagined him lying in bed, conjuring up ways to keep his son and his band of misfits from viewing the filth. Not tonight, hon, I’m plotting.
A couple of days later, he struck back- with Sicilian gusto- whacking those under appreciated, oh-so-handy buttons, the + and the -. I hated to see them go. But what I really hated was the way the remote looked, like a wounded soldier returning from an unpopular war. A cripple. With four missing limbs. It didn’t deserve such a fate, it never did anything to nobody. An innocent victim caught in the crossfire, in a battle of wits between a cop and a thief, a father and a son. And whenever there’s battlefield casualties, the question must inevitably be raised, to what end? To what purpose? Okay, so the remote was rendered useless. So what? Now we’d just use the buttons on the actual cable box, the way old timers used to, the way Bill probably still does. War, war, what is it good for?
It was difficult to believe my father, a veteran of the United States Navy, failed to foresee this simplistic fix. I mean, what was he going to do next? Tear out the buttons on top of the box? Christ. The question I really wanted to ask- the question I’d pay good money to have answered- was what did the guests think when they glimpsed the remote? What if they actually had to use it? How would my parents explain that? Somehow, I don’t think it would involve the truth.
I’m coming! I’m coming! The pudgy guy was really giving it to the cheerleader, plunging in and out, faster and faster, and, yes, harder and deeper. She was convulsing. And so were we. The worst part of being aroused was the indeterminate length of the boner. I couldn’t just make it go away. And the concept of masturbation was a hazy one at best. All I knew about the subject was that weren’t supposed to do it, that you’d either go blind or go to Hell, possibly both… Do all blind people go to Hell? Does God assume you got that way whacking off? Nah, he would know. He has to, he’s God, for Christ- no, blind people go to heaven, I’m sure of it. They may not see the pearly gates, but they couldn’t miss the sound. Whoosh.
I didn’t hear the crunch. None us of did. Not even Chad, our trusted scout. The moans and the shrieks and the oh, god!’s drowned out everything but our lusty visions. That’ll be me one day. You watch. The pudgy guy stroked his penis up and down, madly, a thousand strokes a second. Then, all of a sudden, a geyser of white stuff, this milky juice, spewed forth. The gunk sprayed everywhere, a busted fire hydrant, raining all over her tits, her face, her hair, that mane of dark hair. She dipped her index finger in a puddle of the juice and licked it. Whoa! What does that taste like?
The garage door chg-chg-chugged open, the sound a roller coaster makes inching up a steep incline. Chad fired to his feet, boner be damned. He tried to appear innocent, but fear pockmarked his face. It was as noticeable as a full blown case of chicken pox. Ruch switched stations. Till next month, cheerleader. I flung aside the pillow- evidence?- while Ralph licked the orange dust off his fingers, not a care in the world.
My mom shuffled through the door. Halfway through, she froze. Her eyes drank in the scene, sifting through the evidence: six kids, lounging around the living room… at this hour, a school hour… watching, of all things, a rodeo.
“Hi, Mrs. Sywensky,” Ruch said, in a singsong voice.
She eyed him impishly. “Mister Ruch.” She glanced at the mutilated remote in his hand, then marched across the carpet, up the stairs, out of sight. Gone. Did she know? There was no hard evidence, I was sure of that. Only circumstantial. I knew the alibi didn’t help. I mean, yeah, we were sports fans, but a rodeo? Besides, all she has to do is suspectwe were watching it. ‘Beyond a reasonable doubt’ held no water, not in this house, not when you’re on probation- porn probation, no less. I wondered what my dad’s next move would be…
I’ll bet he gets rid of the whole damn thing. Bust the cursed box into shrapnel. He’d do it, all right. Even though I’m sure he’s no stranger to Channel 27 himself. Probably knows all about Candie and the cheerleader and that pudgy guy with the mustache. Still, he’d chuck it. Just to spite us, just to win the war. Take us down with him. That’s what Bill would do.