It was an eventful year. I had become a good student. Attentive. Retentive. I’d found subjects I liked, courses that interested me. But I wasn’t sure where following that road would lead me, except as a teacher. I never really liked being an instructor at the pool. I wasn’t sure I had the knack for it.
There was also an age thing. I was 22, going on 23, and I was losing my hair, making me look older than I was, I suppose. I tried meeting other students, other people in my classes, those people I habitually ran into, but nothing really took.
Matt Hait and I went to a few parties, but there were a lot of Frats and Sororities in attendance. It would have been easier to breach a phalanx than break through those closed ranks, boys and girls alike. This is not to say that I didn’t try. There was a cute blonde at one, and I did make a whole-hearted attempt to get her name, to break the ice, and hopefully get her number; but she begged off, tossed off some feeble excuse about needed to go grocery shopping, and fled with her girlfriends. I wanted to leave. Matt wanted to stay.“Seriously, man,” I said, “what IS the point? You’re not doing any better than I am.”
He had to agree. We polished off our beers, went downtown, double-fisted Souvlaki street meat, and prowled attic punk bars.
I’d made a feeble attempt at wooing Sharon Martin, Garry’s sister. I’d always
thought she was cute, and as we were both in London, I thought I might give her
a shot. I asked her out a few times, and though she always accepted, it always
turned into a “group” date. It turned out that her friend had a crush on me. I
was less attracted to her friend than I was to her.
Needless to say, there weren’t many girls in my life. I did get a blast from
some other David Leonard’s conquests, from time to time. Every so often some
girl would call in the late hours to give him shit for not calling. I’d direct
them to the UWO phone book listings, and there he was, his name and number right
under mine. Some apologised, others hung up in a huff. One was insistent that I
was lying. I told her that if she didn’t believe me, she could meet me in the
pub, tomorrow after my classes. I went so far as to describe what I would wear.
She thought I was blowing her off. I looked at my clock. 11:30 pm. I asked her
if she was pretty. She said I ought to know. I told her that if she was that
insistent, I’d meet her in the pub in 30 minutes. She paused. I asked, “Well?
Are you going to meet me or not?” She was hesitant, then. “Look,” I said, “if
you’re not going to meet me, I’m going back to bed.” I repeated the other
David’s phone number, and said if it didn’t work out, I’d be in the pub at 3:00
pm, the next day. I was. I brought a book. She didn’t show. If she did, she
didn’t grace me with her presence at my table. I mused on how Chris Cooper had
suffered the same experience the year before. I, at least, was able to get some
sleep.
There was a promising friendship with one of Jamie’s “friends.” He was the very
embodiment of urban cool to a Northern hick from the sticks. He was gregarious.
He owned porkpie hats, so maybe he’s where I got that from. He didn’t own a
car, but he rented one every couple weekends, citing that renting was far
cheaper than owning, admitting that he really couldn’t afford one, anyways. One
weekend, we were on a beer run. We were stopped at a red light, windows down,
Glass Tiger’s “Don’t Forget Me (When I’m Gone)” vibrating the panels. We were
singing along. Jamie’s friend spotted a couple of girls in the car across the
intersection, and began serenading them, chair dancing, pointing directly at
them. He nudged me, so I accompanied him, lagging a little behind his dance
moves. The girls noticed, pointed towards us, and laughed, loving the show. I
couldn’t keep it up; I tried to, but I melted with laughter. The light turned
green, and as we crossed, they waved, they called out to us, and we waved back.
He called out to them too as we passed by, “Don’t you forget about us, you
hear?” Sadly, that friendship didn’t last long. Jamie screwed him over,
borrowed money, didn’t pay it back, slept with a girl he liked. He and Jamie
had a row. They exchanged blows. “You use people,” he bellowed at Jamie when it
was over. “You don’t give a shit about anybody but yourself!”
“See ya, kid,” he said to me as he left (stupid really; we were the same age).
But I never did see him again, and that was that.
So, no girlfriend, not many friends but my housemates, Jeff and Walter, I took
to myself most days. This is not to say that I didn’t have acquaintances. I
did. Chris Loreto, for one (an O’Gorman friend who was studying medicine at
UWO); a fellow in my Economics class; a few others; but not many. I hung out at
the Wave, the cafeteria; at the Spoke, the pub; and at the bars with them on
occasion. But as I said, I took to myself most days. Sometimes I hung out at
the Spoke, sometimes at the Wave. Sometimes I hung out at the Encore café in
Talbot Hall. It was a sleepy lounge, facing west, the afternoon sun cooking all
in it. I liked it there. It was hot, cozy and quiet, so many days I’d crash
there with a book.
So, I was especially pleased when Garry Martin called in the early spring,
announcing his intention to visit. He was officially visiting his sister, but
she lived in an all-girl dorm, so he asked to stay at my place. I was thrilled.
I made tentative plans, and we did go out, once with Sharon, once Stag. Garry
was open to anything, so we hung out for a long time talking before hitting a
dance club. Surprisingly, Garry didn’t dance much; I suppose he didn’t want to
leave me at the bannister by myself. We left early, and spent the rest of the
night catching up.
Exams loomed. The house grew deathly quiet. But unlike college, there could be
some time between finals. There was one final outing with Matt and his
classmates.
One gent, a few years older than me, began to roughhouse with another of Matt’s
buddies, to impress a girl. It did not go well. He was easily bested. The other
guy even took care not to hurt him. That made it worse. His wrestling became
more than just roughhousing, but he did no better; that made his feeble fight
even more frantic. He was losing face, and he knew it. The other guy told him
to stop it, that he’d had enough of his bullshit. He didn’t, and the bested boy
was laid flat. Exhausted, he turned away. He may have cried. He saw what little
hope he’d had with his unrequited love die a quick, painful death.
I felt sorry for him. We all did, even the guy who’d laid him out. He saw our
sympathy in all of our eyes. I saw humiliation in his.
He need not have been. Even though he had failed, he had at least fought for
his love, hopeless though it was.
I had seen mine slip through my fingers.