So, to say the least, I had suddenly become hot shit. Just kidding. If anything, I now felt like a complete imposter. Alex seemed to have accepted me as somewhat cool, and now Robbie added a level of intrigue, and Henry was ever present. Despite being hot shit, I rarely saw a text from Alex. I had already placed him in the category of "people who don't text" alongside other major figures of my life: my grandma, for example.
When Alex did text, though, it was a surprising treat. "Hey. I'm having a Halloween party. Come. Costumes mandatory." It sounded like the kind of text you would blast out to your 150 closest friends, but I'd take it. Needless to say, it sent me careening into a whole territory of college-aged fear.
"Henry." I said, slightly gasping as he picked up the phone.
"Special Agent Connor, you've made contact. Over." Henry said in a great imitation of a G-man type.
"Sorry. Please, are you free right now? I need help."
"Slow down ma'am, where's the fire?"
"Shut up. I need a Halloween costume. Please." I pleaded.
"Meet me at ThriftCity." The line went silent, because apparently Henry was really committed to one shtick or another today.
ThriftCity is a very run-down, very 90s thrift store buried in a strip mall near campus and nestled between a tobacco store and a vacuum repair shop. The whole thing seems lifted out of the year I was born. The back wall is a blue ribbon splash like you can still see in 80s movies mall settings.
When I walk in, Henry already has an arm full of clothes and a pair of boots hanging off his neck. He looks like a fucking fool when he catches my eye and breaks into that toothy grin.
"Bro, I've got you set. You're gonna absolutely hate it." He says, patting me on the back and handing me the boots.
"You picked out something that you know I'll hate?"
"Was there a costume I could have picked that you wouldn't have hated?" I shut up, because he's absolutely right. I hate dressing up and bringing attention to myself. Ideally, I would like to disappear at this party. Actually, I'd really prefer not to go, but as always, Alex forces me to the very limit.
Henry steers me to a bank of dressing rooms. There's a teenage girl tending them with a ring of keys, popping her gum and staring down at Instagram or something.
"Hi, could we get a room?" Henry bounds towards her.
"Ummmm..." She says, eyeing the two of us. I had no idea what her issue was, because I'm really dumb. Henry spots it immediately.
"We can share. We're brothers." He says simply, and walks to the door he wants her to open. Effortless.
Inside, I'm eying the mound of clothes and realizing that when trapped in a tiny room, Henry's height gain on me is all the more noticeable. He's somehow so nextdoor neighbor handsome, even when you're looking up his nose.
The clothes though, are another story. He's clearly conconcted something vaguely Old West or something, as he now holds a cowboy hat and the boots are clearly meant to resemble something a cowboy might wear. Plus, a scruffy plaid shirt and the kind of pants I would never, ever wear.
"Relax." He says, sensing my discomfort. "Try it on. We're going for Brokeback Mountain, except less repressed." He laughs, and I laugh along even though I'm still definitely unsure.
I pull my polo up and over my head and take the plaid shirt from his hand. I begin to button it before he stops me, grabbing my hand gently.
"Don't button it up, dude." He says, and he's got that smile that says he's in on a joke that I'm not.
"What? I'm not going with my shirt unbuttoned."
"Can you trust me? This is a college Halloween party. There won't be anyone with a covered chest. There will be girls with their tits out. Relax." He minds me.
When all is said and done, Henry actually had done an amazing job. It is vaguely sexy, but the hat makes it obvious what the look is meant to be. And I don't have to wear anything I feel super stupid in. Just an unbuttoned shirt. The only hurdle I have to get past to make this costume work is my exposed chest, which is a lot easier than if he had come up with Tarzan or sexy Caveman or put me in a toga. Henry knows me.
As we walk out of ThriftCity with a costume for the low everyday price of $15 ($15! Can you believe it) - I ask Henry:
"Will you please come with me? To the party, I mean."
"Already planned on it." He says, slapping me on the back and turning to walk the other way.
"What are you gonna be?" I call after him.
"We'll see, I guess." And with that, he's almost out of earshot.
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