Five years is a big difference in age when you're young. My brother Dennis practically seemed like an adult to me. He called me 'Little Cara'. As children we lived in Greenwich Village in New York City. When I started school at five my mother went back to work and Dennis became more than just an older brother.
He took me to and from school on west 11th street. (Where you can get the best pizza in the world at "Ray's Famous") We spent every afternoon together until our mother came home for dinner.
I never remember him complaining about having to take care of me. He brought me to the stickball and punchball games where I sat and played with dolls or the coloring books he brought for me. Mostly we stayed in the small apartment where he read about cars and made up games for us to play.
As we got older I realized that not everyone had a person like my brother who would be there when they had a problem or wanted to hear what Mrs. Cleary did when Gary threw the eraser out the window. I looked up to him for the right and some of the wrong reasons.
By the time he was a senior in high school, Dennis was a 'celebrity'. He played in a band, was in the Viscounts Social Club (gang) and had a comfortable charm around the girls. The small scar on the left cheek of his handsome face didn't seem to hurt. He had as many guys around him as girls probably because they hoped something would rub off on them.
By the time I reached thirteen, I was a desperately unhappy girl. I was one of the youngest freshmen in the school after 'skipping' eighth grade. (Too smart I thought) I guess my face was average looking; (Ugly I thought) my body was more fully developed than the seniors. (Grotesque I thought)
I came home crying on too many days because of the unwanted attention from the boys. I even tried binding my breasts until Dennis made me stop. He told me I was pretty but no matter how much I looked up to him; in this area I didn't believe him.
The day before Christmas vacation three senior boys made a huge mistake. They were having a good time after their last period class: grabbing pocketbooks, messing hair and occasionally feeling a girl up. They didn't know whose sister I was and felt up the wrong girl.
Dennis came home and found me sobbing. His face turned red but he calmly asked who the boys were. He was able to find out about one of them and got his phone number. I told him "no" a hundred times but finally Dennis made me call him up. I'll never forget the conversation or the sound of his smirking voice.
"Hi it's Cara the girl you 'met' today after school. I was going to the Waverly for the five o'clock show and thought you might like to come".
"Sure babe, all right, I'll be there. See you on Sixth Avenue".