Sunday, October 28, 2012

Chapter 1 – Dave W.


            “You’re ugly.”
            Those are the first words Dave Wojtowicz ever said to me.
            “You’re ugly.”
            At least that’s the way I remember it. That day back in 1965 when we were first graders at St. Clare de Maltese Falcon (St. Clare de Montefalco, actually). His class was lined up in the basement hallway of “The Old Building,” waiting for Sister Charles Catherine to lead them back to their classroom after their bathroom break. And my class, with Sister Margaret Matthew in charge, was lined up to take our turn at the row of urinals that stretched from our noses to our toes.
            “You’re ugly.”
            An observation more likely borne from curiosity or boredom than aggression or malice. Or perhaps a litmus test to see if I was made of the stuff Dave expected from a potential  friend.
            “You’re ugly.”
            An unconventional ice-breaker. Not a typical opening gambit, but one that managed to propel a couple of bright, goofy, seven-year-olds into each other’s gravitational pulls, launching a friendship forged primarily by a shared odd sense of humor and a love of sports played in backyards, on playgrounds and in the streets.
            It would be the following school year before our friendship would take hold, the year we shared a homeroom for the first of seven consecutive years.
            Had Dave and I not wound up directly across from each other in the hall that morning long enough for him to lay down his "you're ugly" gauntlet, my life might have been very different. But we did and our friendship burned brightly for seven years, coming to an end as all good things must. But that particular fire was so powerful, the embers still glow 40-some years later.
            The seemingly indestructible bond between us would begin to break during our first year of high school. Not because of some inexplicable, adolescent explosion, but just because that’s what friendships sometimes do. And that’s too bad because it was such a great friendship.
            Even though I was only six years old, I was armed with an arsenal of snappy comebacks like “I'm rubber and you're glue”; “I know you are, but what am I”; and the classic “Oh yeah?” I opted instead for a more ruthless, less original retort. My “You're ugly, too” must have stung him like a serpent's tooth. I can only assume it was much worse than death-by-a-thousand cuts. And a year later, the appearance of Dave’s first pair of glasses would put to rest any questions he had had about my physiognomy.
            Who’d have guessed that the words “you're ugly,” with such obvious potential to cause pain could signal the start of an incredible friendship. And who could have guessed that six years later, the boy who said those words to me would step in to fight a battle that should have been mine, to take a nasty beating as I looked on, horrified – frozen and sniffling – as I wiped a bully’s hocker from my face.
            In spite of, or perhaps because of, the intensity of our friendship, we became fierce competitors on many of the battlefields of youth – in the classroom and in a variety of sports. But then what friendship’s ever been worth a damn that didn’t include a healthy dose of unhealthy competition?

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