[1]
WHEN I WAS FIVE I KILLED MYSELF.
I was waiting for Popeye who comes after the News. He has large wrists for a person and he is strong to the finish. But the News wouldnāt end.
My dad was watching it. I had my hands over my ears because I am afraid of the News. I donāt enjoy it as television. It has Russians on who will bury us. It has the President of the United States who is bald. It has highlights from this yearās fabulous Autorama where I have been once, it was quite enjoyable as an activity.
A man came on the News. He had something in his hand, a doll, and he held it up. (You could see it wasnāt real because of the sewing.) I took my hands off.
āThis was a little girlās favorite toy,ā the man said. āAnd tonight, because of a senseless accident, she is dead.ā
I ran up to my room.
I jumped on my bed.
I stuffed my face into my pillow and pushed it harder and harder until I couldnāt hear anything anymore. I held my breath.
Then my dad came in and took my pillow away and put his hand on me and said my name. I was crying. He bent over and put his hands under me and lifted me up. He did this to the back of my hair and I put my head on him. He is very strong.
He whispered, āItās ok, Son, donāt cry.ā
āIām not,ā I said. āIām a big boy.ā
But I was crying. Then Dad told me that every day somebody gets dead and nobody knows why. Itās just the rules. Then he went downstairs.
I sat on my bed for a long time. I sat and sat. Something was wrong inside me, I felt it inside my stomach and I didnāt know what to do. So I layed down on the floor. I stuck out my pointer finger and pointed it at my head. And I pushed down my thumb. And killed myself.
[2]
I AM AT THE CHILDRENāS TRUST RESIDENCE CENTER.
I am here for what I did to Jessica. My nose is still bleeding but it doesnāt hurt, but my face is black and blue on my cheek. It hurts. I am ashamed.
When I got here the first person I met was Mrs Cochrane. She came to meet me at the desk where I was with my mom and dad. Everybody shook hands but me. I had my hands in my pockets. They were fists. Mrs Cochrane took me away. She is ugly. I could ralph looking at her and she wears slacks even though she is old. She talks very quiet to me like I am sleeping. Iām not sleeping.
She took me to my wing. It has six beds in it. No curtains, no rugs. No dressers. No television. The windows have bars on them like jail. I am in jail for what I did to Jessica.
Then I went to see Dr Nevele.
His office is that way, go down this hall and go through the big doors and then go this way and then thatās where. He has hair up his nose, it looks like SOS pads. He told me to sit down. I did. I looked out the window which doesnāt have bars and Dr Nevele asked me what I was looking at. I said birds. But I was looking for my dad to take me home.
There was a picture on Dr Neveleās desk of children and there was a picture of Jesus Christ which is phony I feel because they didnāt have cameras then. He was on the cross and somebody hung a sign over him. It said INFO. That means you can ask him directions.
Dr Nevele sat down behind his desk. He said, āNow why doesnāt Burt tell me something about himself, such as his most favorite things to do.ā
I folded my hands in my lap. Like a little gentleman. I didnāt say anything.
āCome on, Burt. What are your very favorite things to do, say with some of your friends.ā
I sat. I didnāt say any answer. He looked at me with his eyes, and I looked out the window for my dad only I couldnāt see him. Dr Nevele asked me again and then again and then he stopped asking. He waited for me to talk. He waited and waited. But I wouldnāt talk. He stood up and walked around the room and then he looked out the window too, so I stopped looking out it.
I said, āItās night.ā
Dr Nevele looked at me. āNo it isnāt, Burton. Itās day outside. Itās the middle of the afternoon.ā
āItās night,ā I said. āWhen Blacky comes.ā
Dr Nevele looked at me. āIs the night named Blacky?ā he said.
(Outside the window a car parked and another car went away. My brother Jeffrey can name you any car, any car, man. He is an expert at cars. But when we ride in the back seat of our car we get yelled at due to horseplay.)
āAt night Blacky comes to my house,ā I said, but I didnāt say it to Dr Nevele. I said it to Jessica. āWhen I am tucked in tight. He stands outside my window and waits. He knows when. He is silence. He doesnāt say any noise, not like other horses. But I know he is there because I can hear him. He sounds like the wind. But heās not. He smells like oranges. Then I tie my sheets together and lower myself out the window. It is a hundred feet down. I live in a tower. Itās the only tower on my block.
āWhen I ride him his hooves make the sound like baseball cards in bicycle spokes and people think that thatās what it is. But it isnāt. Itās me. And I ride Blacky out to where thereās no more houses and no more people. Where thereās no more school. To where they have the jail where they keep people who didnāt do anything wrong, and we stop next to the wall. It is silence. I stand on Blacky, he is very slippery but I never slip. And I climb over the wall.
āInside are soldiers, they have white belts crisscrossed on them like safety boys only with beards. They are sweaty. They are sleeping. One of them is snoring, the fat one who is mean to children.
āI sneak down to the jail part where the windows have bars on them and I whisper to the people inside, āAre you innocent?ā They say yes. So I unlock the bars with my pointer finger and let them out.
āJust as I am climbing back over the wall the fat one who doesnāt like children wakes up and sees me, but it is too late. I just wave at him and jump. It is a hundred feet down. Everybody thinks I am dead. But Iām not. I have a cape on and I hold it out like this and the wind comes and it fills up the cape and I like fly. I land on Blacky and then we go and have cookies and milk. I dunk them.ā
Dr Nevele stared at me. āThatās very interesting,ā he said.
āI wasnāt talking to you.ā
āWho were you talking to?ā
āYou know who.ā
āWho?ā
(Outside a little boy like me played with a ball, he bounced it on the parking lot and laughed. His dad came and took him away from The Childrenās Trust Residence Centerāhome, where he played with trains that really go.)
āBurt, I want us to be pals. Pals that tell each other things. Because I think I can help you figure out what your problems are, and then help you solve them. Youāre a sick little boy. The sooner you let me help you the sooner youāll get better and go home. Help me, ok?ā
I folded my hands up in my lap. It is correct for sitting. It is good citizenship. No talking, no gum. Dr Nevele stood in front of me and waited but I didnāt say anything. I listened to the noise from out in the hall at The Childrenās Trust Residence Center, of children crying.
āI have to go now,ā I said.
āWhy?ā
āMy dad is here.ā
āBurt, your parents have gone.ā
āNo itās special, they came back to tell me something. They came back for me, Dr Nevele.ā
āPlease sit down.ā
I was standing next to the door. I put my hand on the knob.
āPlease sit down, Burt.ā
I watched him and I opened the door a little and he walked to me. I ran to the other side of his desk. He closed the door and stood in front of it.
āBurt, were you talking to Jessica?ā
I didnāt say anything.
āJessica is not here,ā he said.
So I took the picture of Jesus Christ and threw it on the floor. I put the wastebasket on top of it and smashed it, then kicked it and ran to the corner by the window.
āSheās in the hospital. Her mother was very upset. Very. Maybe youād like to tell me your side of the story.ā
My throat started to hurt. It was killing me. I screamed āYou shit assā at him and made it hurt more, so I screamed it again and again. I screamed and screamed.
Dr Nevele walked to behind his desk. He didnāt say anything and sat down and started reading a piece of paper like there wasnāt anybody there. Only there was. There was a little boy in the corner. It was me.
āI have to call my dad,ā I said. āI just remembered I have to tell him something.ā
Dr Nevele shook his head without looking at me.
I walked over to his bookshelf. I leaned on it. It wobbled. I looked at Dr Nevele and said, āI wasnāt talking to you,ā but he didnāt look up. āI was talking to Jessica.ā
āJessica is not here.ā
The books crashed down and went all over the room because I pushed the shelf over. The noise scared me. I ran to the door and opened it. Dr Nevele got up. I closed it.
Now he is going to knock some sense into me, I thought. He is going to teach me a lesson Iāll never forget. He is going to show me whoās boss around here. He is going to give me a taste of my own medicine. He is going to do it for my own good and I will thank him someday. And it will hurt him more than it does me.
But he didnāt, he just looked at me. Then he said real quiet, āDo you want the seatbelt?ā
I looked at him. He looked at me. We looked at each other.
āYes.ā
I didnāt know what it was. I watched him, he opened his drawer and took out a belt. He sat me down in the chair and put the belt around me and put the buckles in my hand. I have seen it before, like on airplanes, no holes. I pulled the belt around me. It was tight. I pulled it more. Dr Nevele watched. It was around my stomach and I pulled it and then I pulled it down over my peenie and pulled it tighter and tighter on my peenie until it hurt me so much I started to cry, and I pulled it tighter. On my peenie.
āThatās enough,ā said Dr Nevele. He came over and undid the belt and took it away. He picked up the telephone and dialed but it wasnāt enough numbers. He said, āSend Mrs Cochrane down to my office.ā Then he walked over and ...