Robert M. Smith
I am Brantwood Beach, and I remember. I sit in Ottawa East, in the capital
of Canada, and it was 1959, the year Fidel took over Cuba. There were radio
reports, with static over the airwaves, and this was a new hope. I remember
it well.
That spring, a bunch of boys were playing with firecrackers to celebrate
the Queen's birthday, in the month of May. There was one boy who grew up
to be a doctor, and his brother, who was thirty-eight years later one of
the generals involved in the Somalia scandal; another boy became a bus driver,
and then there was one Robert Smith. Now, Robert was eleven years old, and
he had 200 firecrackers in his right hand pocket. Nobody is sure how it
happened, but maybe a match touched the firecrackers, maybe it was an accident.
But suddenly, as the sun watched, the firecrackers started going off, like
machine gun fire, crackling and exploding, one by one, then faster and faster,
as the boys watched Robert explode.
There was smoke in the air, and the smell of sulphur, and plenty of weeping
and yelling, and the machine gun crepitation of firecrackers going off,
as the boys pulled Robert aside and tried to pull down his pants, which
were on fire, and everyone was in a panic, and then, and then, good old
Jean St-Denis came up to Robert in the middle of this hubbub and hue and
cry, and asked Robert, "Smitty, can I have the rest of your firecrackers?"
(Now there is a poetic justice, because twenty years later, Jean was trafficking
coke in fascist Spain, and got busted and did ten years in jail under Franco's
regime.)
I am Brantwood Beach, and I remember. It was the heyday of motorcycle gangs,
and there were hardrocks. The cops didn't like them, and the cops used to
harass them just for wearing their hair in jelly rolls and riding motorcycles.
Robert Smith and his friends used to walk through the bushes and woods down
by the beach, and find hardrocks sitting around campfires with their girlfriends
and a case of beer or two, and Robert liked the hardrocks; he wanted to
grow up to become one of them. Because all the other grown-ups were phony,
they would talk down to Robert and say, with a nasal voice, "Oh hello,
little boy, what grade are you in?" And they would pat Robert on the
head, whereas the hardrocks, who were seventeen or eighteen years old, would
talk to Robert as an equal. They would discuss what was on their minds.
It's a bit like what Frank Zappa said, to the effect that if children knew
what their parents were up to, they would rise up and kill them in their
sleep. And the parents all had short, short hair, and short, short tempers,
and they worked for the government plotting fascist plots, or so it seemed.
The father of Robert, anyway, would argue against communism, whenever given
the chance. And Robert longed for a friend to play ball with him or take
him fishing, but dear old dad merely helped Robert memorize his catechism
lessons every night, for two hours at a time. And if Robert came home with
a report card that gave him a 90 per cent average, but saying Robert came
in second of the class, Robert was in deep trouble. For the home was elitist,
and the expectations were high.
And I am Brantwood Beach. I remember. I remember the time that Joseph de
Banc went down to the beach one night, and left a pile of clothes on the
sand and walked down into the water, only to swim a hundred feet upstream,
and come back out of the water, thence to hitch-hike to Boston, whence he
would phone his grieving father a month later, after the police had dragged
the waters for nine days, searching for a drowned corpse. And Robert Smith
watched the police dragging the waters, and he pondered all these things
in his heart.
Likewise, Robert Smith was in the hospital that summer to get his leg operated
on for the firecracker burns, for the scar kept pussing and never healed.
It was a kiloid wound, and could have turned into cancer. And one morning,
in the hospital, Robert wandered around on his wheelchair, and went to visit
one of the boys there, who was about the same age, around twelve. And the
boy was weeping, and he asked Robert, "Here, touch my leg, tell me
it's still there!!" And the boy was desperate, for a train had run
over his leg and his leg had been amputated the night before by the doctors,
and Robert didn't know what to say, so he answered, "Yes, it's still
there." And there was no leg there, just crumpled bedsheets on a hospital
bed.
And I am Brantwood Beach. The girls in bikinis used to come and neck with
their boyfriends on the sand, and Robert Smith would lust a tiny little
boy lust and then rush off to confession and tell the priest he found girls
pretty. And the priests would sit behind the grate and ask, "How many
times, my son?" And Robert found out as an adult that you could tell
a priest in a confessional that you had slept with three hookers, robbed
a bank, killed an old lady, and as long as you were repentant, the priest
would give you the absolution. But if you told the priest something like,
"Every time I go to mass, I think of the Spanish Inquisition,"
the priest would blow a fuse and kick you out of the confessional box.
And at Brantwood Beach, the waters were polluted soon later. In 1959, there
was a bit of seaweeed, but now the beach is closed down for pollution reasons.
I guess if the Cold War wasn't going to destroy the Earth, the pollution
would. And Robert Smith said his prayers every night, praying we wouldn't
get nuked by the Russians during the night. And it was dark outside, and
the nuns warned the students that on May 1st, 1960 it was going to be the
end of the world. And they looked pretty silly on the next day and the next
day. And the Year 2000 is upon us, and Fidel is still alive and well in
Havana, and Robert Smith has a scar on his right thigh. Here, look, can
you feel my leg?
|
|