The first Valentine's Day that I remember was in First Grade. I remember the excitement, handmaking individual valentines for the girls in my class. My mother was a scrapbooker and we had fun crafting new and varied cards. She laughed as I insisted on making a special cards for a certain girl, whom I steadfastly denied having a crush on. I remember my mother's gentle laughter as she hugged me, amused by my childish deflections.
"You're such a beautiful boy, Lonnie." she said proudly. "I'm sure you're going to come home with piles of valentine's from smitten little girls."
"Yuck!" I exclaimed, but I secretly smiled at the thought.
The next day before recess, we all opened a brown lunch bag on our desk, with our names written large on them. The boys gathered the Valentine cards they'd brought in and went out onto the playground, while the girls danced around the classroom, depositing the cards they had in the appropriate bag. Then, they went out to lunch and the boys returned to the classroom and distributed their cards.
I had more cards to distribute than anyone else, because I had insisted that every girl in our class should get one. "No one should feel left out, Mommy. Everyone gets a card. Imagine how they'd feel if they didn't get a card." We'd made plain ones for the girls that I hadn't marked for the special card. Because I had so many, and had marked each one by name, it took me longer to distribute mine. When I looked up, the classroom was empty, except for the teacher, who impatiently shooed me out to lunch. She wasn't on playground or lunchroom duty, so she hurried off to the teachers' lounge for her lunch and rest period.
Bobby Benton was on the playground, bragging that he was going to have the most Valentines. Even in First Grade, Bobby was already sure that he was God's Gift to little girls. He'd also marked me as his favorite target.
"Hey, Loonie," purposely mispronouncing my name, Bobby mocked me, "how many cards are you going to get, loser? None, I bet. You're such a loser, Loonie!" Suddenly, other kids began chanting, "Loonie, Loonie, LOONIE!"
I turned and ran. Why does tormenting others come so easily to some kids? Bobby was a redheaded, freckled face kid, with gapes in his teeth, yet he felt superior to me and led other kids into mocking me. Of course, at seven, I didn't have those thoughts. I just felt hurt. But I had plenty of years in the future to parse the events of that day, and most days thereafter, attempting to understand my life.
I sat by myself in the far corner of the playground, until the bell rang, ending recess. I shook off the miserable feelings I had been indulging in and ran to the classroom with great anticipation. I couldn't wait to see the St. Valentine cards I was going to get. Did the girl that I (secretly) liked give me a special card?
When I got to my desk, boys and girls throughout the classroom were gleefully pulling cards out of their bags. Bobby lifted a thick handful up over his head, for everyone to see. He did seem to have the most cards. Well, I was betting that I had more.
I reached into my bag and... felt the bottom of the bag. I looked in and saw the bottom of the bag. Not one card.
Not one card.
Not one card.
I sat, looking into the bag, pretending that I was looking at something inside. I surreptitiously looked around the classroom and saw Michelle West grinning at me. I swallowed hard. I looked around and saw others laughing. I bit my lips and tried to hold back my tears. What I told my mother was right. It does make you feel bad.
I ran out of the classroom. I think I surprised the teacher, because I was out the door and down the hall before I heard her yelling at me. I didn't stop. I was out the door and running down the street before the janitor caught me and brought me back, tears of shame and embarrassment running down my face.
I sat in the principal's office, waiting for my mother to arrive. The principal couldn't make heads or tails of my sobbing and whining. When my mother arrived, she was horrified to see the shape I was in, sobbing, with tears and snot running down my face. She rushed to gather me into her arms.
As she held me and wiped the damage off my face, I tried to explain, "Nuh,,ah, un, nuh un", I whined. When she finally understood that I was saying "Not one", she was puzzled and asked, "Not one what, sweetie?"
My mother was the gentlest person I had ever met, and would ever meet, but the mama bear came out in her when she realized that I hadn't gotten one valentine that day. The principal actually took two steps back when my mother jumped towards him, even though his desk was between them. My teacher stepped into the office to check on me just as my mother exploded.
"How? How do you let a little boy get hurt like that? Did no one even think to ensure that no child was ignored?" She gestured to me. "He did. He made sure he had a card for every girl in his class. Where the hell was his teacher?" Her hands were gripping the edge of the desk, knuckles white with fury.
My teacher blanched and began to retreat when my mother became aware of her presence. She froze as my mother's glare focused on her. "Well," my mother demanded.
"It's never happened before - I didn't think...." The woman looked at the principal for help. He stepped up.
"Please go back to your class and find out why this boy was excluded from the valentine exchange." The teacher moved faster than I'd ever seen her move.
When she returned, she was shaking her head. "Lonnie wasn't excluded. When I asked the class why no one had given him a Valentine, most of the girls protested that they had. I don't know why his bag was empty."
As my mother hugged me, kissed my head, and told me that, "See, you had Valentines!", I knew what had happened. Bobby Benton and his cousin, Michelle West, both freckled redheads. He'd bragged that he'd have the most - because he'd stolen mine! And Michelle knew it. That way she was looking at me and laughing. And I'd given her my special card. I hated them both.
"I wanna go home. Please, Mommy. I wanna go home," I mumbled. I was embarrassed to go back to class. Everyone had seen me run out, crying. I didn't want to go back, ever. Mom had hugged me again, gathered me up, and had taken me home. I don't think the principal approved, but he wasn't going to cross the momma bear.
She kept me home the next day, Friday, so it was four days before I had to face my classmates again. Bobby started right in on me before class, "Wittle Wonnie go crying to mommy because he didn't get no valentines?" I didn't find it funny, but some of my classmates sure did. Enough to repeat it in a chorus.
Michelle came up to me with a big smile. "Lonnie," she started.