I met Carl in high school. He was my best friend then and he will always be that to me. He had transferred into our school during our senior year from a small town in upstate New York. His dad was a supervisor at the paper mill in town. His mom didn't work. She didn't have to because his dad was kind of a big shot at the mill. He wore a white shirt and necktie everyday to work and had to go to a lot of meetings. They lived in a big house on the edge of town.
Both of my parents worked at the mill, but they were just ordinary people. They didn't have to go to meetings, just show up for work. My mom worked in the office, doing payroll. Back then, everyone was paid in cash. She told me how she had to figure out how many single bills of ones, fives, tens and twenties she would have to get from the bank, just so everyone would get the right amount in each pay envelopeβeven the pennies had to be counted out. It was kind of tricky with no room for errors. It would take her all week to tally up all the time cards and then get all those envelopes ready for payday. She would be rolling over in her grave today if she could see how fast computers handle everything. Well, she would be out of job, too, just as all of the other mill workers are today.
My dad ran one of those giant machines that made facial tissues. He always said it was boring and the best part of the day was when the machine broke down and he could get a chance to fix something rather than just sit and watch it turn out miles of tissues. Every couple of months, he would have to change all of the rollers in the machine, and then, they would manufacture toilet paper for a couple of months after that. It's hard to believe facial tissue and toilet paper were made on the same machine, but they were.
The very first day that Carl arrived in school I was immediately attracted to him. He was tall and thin with red curly hair. He was cute and he had a great smile, but all the while I kept thinking about how I was going to get him to lose those thick tortoise shell eyeglasses that continually slipped down his nose. He was always pushing them back up on his face. It could have been a nervous habit, but it annoyed the hell out of me.
I remembered being one of the first ones to introduce myself to him. My hallway locker was only a few doors away from his and somehow we always managed to meet there in between classes and start talking.
"Hi, I'm Barbara. How do you like the school so far?" My eyes dropped from his to the combination lock; 36 right, 24 left, 36 right. Yah, I knew how to flirt way back then, too. The art of flirting comes natural to some people, and I'm one of them. My mother always told me, "Barbara, if you got it, flaunt it; just don't let your father catch you doing it."
"Hi, I'm Carl. I like the chemistry teacher, Mrs. Lyons. She's so ho . . ., I mean umm, she's nice. Yeah, she's nice. She's a great teacher." He was clearing stammering and stuttering over his words. I couldn't tell if I took him by surprise with my question, or if he was nervous talking to girls.
"Yeah, she is very nice. I had her for homeroom last year. She never cares if you're late," as I reached for the top button of my sweater and played with it for a few seconds before I unconsciously pushed it through the buttonhole to release the nervous heat building under it. The longer we stood together and talked, I felt the need to undo one more button, and then another, until finally the bell rang and it was time to get to the next class.
"See ya," I said and went on my merry way, but I could feel him watching me walk down the hallway. I new I had a wiggle and I knew when to use it.
It was the day before my eighteenth birthday when I finally worked up enough nerve to ask Carl to come to my party.
"Would you like to come to my birthday party tomorrow night?" I was so afraid of being turned down, I couldn't look up at him; 36 right, 24 left, 36 right. My insides were shaking and saying, "Please say yes, please say yes, please say yes." I was hoping that I wasn't saying that out loud as I twisted the dial on the lock.
"Sure. I'd love to go! Where's it going to be and what time does it start?" He was grinning from ear to ear. I think he was happy to finally connect to someone in his school.
"My house, any time after seven o'clock. I live in one of the mill houses downtown. I'll write the address for you. Oh, and bring your favorite records. We all like to dance," only it was my insides that were dancing and I'd have to get used to that feeling for many years to come. I know I was talking way too fast for him to understand anything, but he seemed to be taking it all in. He was still smiling at me and I couldn't have been any more excited about him wanting to attend the party. I was going to be eighteen the very next day and I skipped all the way home from school that day.
Carl was the first boy I had ever kissed. It's funny how you remember who your first kiss was from; it was kind of awkward. I remembered him saying it was a good way to celebrate my eighteenth birthday. He called it his kiss of approval. That was the same night I took off his glasses after I kept hitting them with my nose. It wasn't long after that when he ordered his first pair of contact lenses. His eyes were the deepest green and I remember his hands reaching deep into my jeans that night, too. But, I was a good girl and didn't want it to go much further than that and we soon returned to the party and the other guests.
Carl started to walk me home after school every day after he came to my party and sometimes we would walk down by the river next the mill. There were swans that nested on the little island out in the middle of the river. I would never finish my lunch and saved my sandwich so I could feed them when we got there. We would toss pieces of bread into the river and they would gracefully make their way through the current to gobble it down, submerging their long necks beneath the surface. In the spring of that year, there were six little baby swans following them. They were so cute and so excited to see us show up everyday with food. It was so interesting to see them change from those little ugly ducklings to those graceful swans. The red tail hawk must have gotten two of the babies because by the end of the summer there were only four cygnets remaining. The two parents, the cob and the pen, were snow white and their four offspring gradually turned gray during the summer months.