It was a Monday in late November of my freshman year. My attraction to Esther, having been watching her in PE, was beginning to move from curiosity to interest. I was sitting in the cafeteria. I hadn't eaten, but my stomach felt heavy.
Heavy with fear. The night before, I had promised Star that I would beat up Mike Jackamanie and Bobby Jericho. They were seniors.
I promised Star that I would do it on Monday.
I promised Star that I would do during lunch where everyone could see.
I promised Star that I would, in her words, "destroy them."
I was scared shitless. Why the fuck would Star have picked me, a freshman?
Looking back, I think I understand. Star had tons of friends and was hugely popular in her class, but her friends were all girls. Boys didn't think of Star as a friend; they thought of her as the object of their surging sexual desire. There was no true allegiance there.
But, she had me, her brother.
I had grown about eight inches in the previous two years, and some of the juniors and seniors at school called me "Man-Child." I didn't look like a freshman. I hit my growth spurt about the same time I fell in love with weightlifting. It paid off. I was the first 9th grader to ever letter in varsity football at our school. I was big and fast, strong and quick.
Star also knew that, like her, I had an athlete's natural instinct for leverage and knowing how to control my body, getting it to do the things I wanted it to do. I could watch someone who'd spent weeks perfecting a skill on the trampoline, say, and in a few measly minutes, I could do it, myself.
I just could do things. I was never on the track team, but a friend of mine wasâhe pole vaulted. During my senior year, I sneaked down to give it a try. It looked pretty fucking cool. The coach was over talking to some of the hurdlers. My friend had a couple underclassmen set the bar at ten feetâa decent beginner's height. I'd watched people pole vault; it didn't seem that hard. My friend gave me a few final pointers.
On my first and only attempt, I cleared the bar by more than four feet. I almost could have stood on that bar. When I emerged from the landing pit with my hands in the air, screaming, one of the coaches ran me off the track. My friend guessed I might have cleared 14 or 14-6. Either of those would have gotten me into the state track meet. I wouldn't have placed or anything, but I would have been there.
So, I sound like I'm bragging, but it was the cold truth. I was a natural, gifted athlete.
I liked it that Star believed in me. My senior sister, I thought, believes her freshman brother can beat up two seniorsâat once. Yeah, I was pretty proud.
But, in the lunchroom, on the day it was supposed to happen, I was terrified.
As a freshman and a dumbass, I was not asking an important question: why did Star want to hurt these guys? What had they ever done to her?
Didn't she hang out with a group of friends that included those two, Jackamanie and Jericho, from time to time?
All I knew was that Star didn't come to church with us on Sunday morning, and she didn't come out of her room all day. Mom said Star was sick. I left her alone.
After Sunday dinnerâwith Star absentâmy parents went out to a movie. I was chilling on the couch when Star appeared.
She looked pale and miserable, but she didn't look or sound physically sick. She made her request, and then she made me swear to a bunch of promises.
The last two promises I had to make were, in retrospect, the most ominous. But, like I said, I was a dumbass.
She made me promise never to ask her why she wanted me to beat their asses.
Then, tears forming in her eyes, she made me promise never to even think about why she wanted me to do this.
So, I sat in the cafeteria, and I watched Jericho and Jackamanie finish their lunches. My mind raced.
I knew I needed to take them on one at a time. Didn't matter how good I was. Two 185 pound seniors versus one 165 pound freshman? I was a goner if it was two on one.
I knew I needed to do it fast. The lunch monitors and the duty officer would instantly break up fights. I'd seen it happen. You got about 30 seconds of fighting in before the adults broke through the crowd and started prying people apart and hauling them to the office.
I knew I needed to cheap shot one of them. That would be the only way to take them on one at a time and to do it fast.
But there was a problem. As soon as the senior boys saw one of their own get cheap-shotted by a freshman, they would scramble from their tables and come after me. Our school had that kind of class unity. Fair fights were another matter. Cheap shots? No. I'd be on the floor with ten seniors kicking on me in a matter of seconds.
Even worse, I'd fail Star, and I couldn't possibly do that. It was unthinkable. She was my big sister. She needed me to be her warrior. I fucking loved her.
So, the only way I could think of winning the fight was just not an option.
Jericho and Jackamanie, ever best of friends according to Star, got up from their table and picked up their trays.
It was now.
My guts turned over. My heart raced frantically. My body felt like a hunk a trembling lead-too heavy to move, too terrified to calm.
I'm sorry, Star. I can't do this. There's no way to win. I'll just get the shit beat out of me.
Fuck that. I stood up and walked around the table towards them.
For years, I didn't remember one strange part of that day. It's easy for me to explain it now, but if someone had asked me, after everythingâafter the whole shebang was all overâwhy I did this strange thing, there's no way I could have supplied a reasonable answer.
One of the tables I walked byâmedium-sized circular ones for about eight people eachâhad just one person sitting at it: Esther.
I stopped beside her. She looked up at me, and I said. "This isn't what I want to do, but I promised someone." I felt her eyes follow me as I continued past her toward the dish room.
I saw Star out of my peripheral vision. She stood up from her table when she saw me. All by herself among hundreds of sitting kids, she rose. I glanced her way and nodded. She started walking towards me.
The dish room where Jackamanie and Jericho were headed had two doorways; both were always wedged completely open during lunch. You walked in from around a corner; you put your trash in the big roll-away bins, threw your silver in the soap and water-filled tubs, set your cups on the big cup holders, and slid your tray on the shelf. Then you walked through the propped-open exit door.
The exit led you right back into the cafeteria.