This is an update on "We Met In Kindergarten." WMIK ended as Jeffrey was about to marry someone else. Inspired by Troye Sivan's beautiful but haunting video, I thought the nap buddies should wind up together. They had loved each other for too long to wind up with others.
*****
Part One
My mom walked me to my first day of kindergarten at Powell Gardens Elementary and introduced me to Mrs. Joyce, the teacher. Hair piled high on her head in a tight bun, Mrs. Joyce changed my life forever that very first day, at nap time. We were a crowded kindergarten, so we all had to have "nap buddies" with whom we shared a nap mat. Mrs. Joyce paired me with Eddie Estes, the youngest of the five Estes boys and the only kid in our class who did not actually live in Powell Gardens, a cinderblock multi-family compound looked down upon by the rest our town (it had been built as inexpensive housing for soldiers returning from WWII, but - in the intervening generation - had become a sort of "project" for our town's poor families). The only people lower on the totem pole than "PGs" were the "river rats" who lived on the river side of the train tracks in shacks on stilts." We were "river rats" who had "moved on up" to PGs.
Eddie came from what people in our town called a "good family," which meant his parents were not divorced (mine were) and owned their own home. Eddie was also Mrs. Joyce's favorite kid, probably because he was clean, well-mannered, and adorably happy. Where I was a shaggy, stern white-haired waif, Eddie was a smiling, tight little 5 year old, brown hair cut tight above his ears and off his neck.
Eddie has been my best friend since our first day sharing a nap mat. It was unlikely to turn out that way. After we spent the 1972-1973 school year together the way only 5-6 year old boys can (playing kick the can, climbing trees, catching crawfish, and spending hours bringing Hot Wheels to life), Eddie headed to St. Thomas's, the Catholic grade school for the south, wealthy end of town. I stayed at Powell Gardens. Not because I was not Catholic. I was. Everyone in our town was, at least as far as I knew. If you could afford to tithe, then you went to one of the Catholic grade schools. If you could not, then you went to one of the public schools. We could barely afford to live, much less tithe, so I stayed at Powell Gardens. Since Eddie and I were at different schools and at different ends of our town's social spectrum, it was unlikely our friendship would endure.
Illness intervened. During second grade, I got the measles, the mumps, and the chicken pox. Needless to say, I missed a lot of school. In fact, I missed so much school they refused to pass me to third grade, even though I was well-ahead of where a second-grader should be. The younger brother to a domineering older sister who liked to play teacher, I knew how to read even before I started kindergarten. So, while other kids were learning the alphabet through the Letter People, I was reading, doing simple math, and otherwise moving ahead. I was so far ahead that my first grade teacher, Mrs. Littlefield, suggested I skip from first to third grade. My mother refused, if for no other reason than to be obstinate, as was her nature
Because of my illnesses, the school that did not want me in the second grade in the first place was now insisting that I repeat it. Public school bureaucracy stood athwart common sense. My mother would have none of it. Bullheaded, she marched me down to St. Thomas's, told them my birth date, and asked if I could enroll in the third grade there. When they said yes, I was taken to Sister Susan's third grade class and put in a desk directly behind none other than Eddie Estes. By the time they found out we could not tithe, it was too late.
Eddie and I beamed at each other. And, we picked up right where we had left off, the way children do so easily. Mostly, that was because Eddie was one of the most genuine humans I would ever meet. Raised well, he did not look down upon the "PGs" like most everyone else at St. Thomas's did.
Sister Mary looked like a giant, wizened penguin. She seemed ancient, and she wore the full habit. The only visible parts of her body were her fat hands and her chunky, wrinkled face.
She was also a tough old broad. She put up with little of the bullshit third graders dish out.
I was still ahead of my classmates, so I was an ongoing distraction for my classmates and source of frustration for Sister Mary. One day, she grabbed me by my right ear, "led" me to the hallway, and forced me down on a bench. Taking my chin in her right hand, she raised my face so I was look her directly in her horn rimmed eyes.
"Jeffrey Redding, you're the smartest kid in that classroom," she admonished me. "Start acting like it."
I stared at her, dumbstruck and scared. She seemed to expect an answer, but I had none to givej.
"If you aren't going to say anything, then I will," she continued. "When we go back in there, you move your desk to the front of the room. And, you raise your hand every single time you know the answer. I'll bet you an ice cream cone you know the answer every time. If you do, then I'll buy you an ice cream cone."
I did. When school was out, Sister Mary walked me down the street to the Corner Dairy. I was surprised when she got an ice cream cone. St. Thomas's nuns were mythic figures to all of us. I couldn't imagine one could eat an ice cream cone.
While we walked back, Sister Mary gave me a pep talk, reiterating that I was the smartest kid in the class and encouraging me to act like it. I got little positive feedback at home. I became addicted to the positive feedback I got in school. Sister Mary had set me on a path. I may have found my way on my own, but I may not have.
*****
The summer after third grade, I biked the six blocks to Eddie's house every day. We played outside all day, every day, shirtless and barefooted. There was no such thing as sun screen, and we turned dark brown. We looked dirty, even when we weren't.
On the Fourth of July, I had my first sleepover. At Eddie's, of course. We put up a small tent in his backyard, and we shared a sleeping bag. We awoke wrapped in each other. We were little boys, and it was no big deal.
We went on like that, moving through fourth, fifth, and sixth grades. I was embarrassed about where I lived, so I never had Eddie over. I was always at his house. His mother joked that I was her sixth son.
When I stayed at the Estes's, Eddie and I either shared his full bed or the living room floor. We always slept in our little white underwear. We almost always awoke wrapped in each other. We were best friends, and we acted and loved each other like identical twin brothers.