At that age, lots of words were just sounds anyway. I didn't
know the word fag, though I confess it strangely sounded warm
and appealing to me. My parents weren't impressed when I went
around the house singing silly nonsense verses with the words
"fag" and "faggy" slipped into them. I just liked the sound of
it. And I guess I liked the reaction of grown-ups when they
heard me singing it.
It turned out the homosexual taunt wasn’t what had prompted "the
talk". It was the phrase "your real dad". You see, I am adopted
and this was the first time this news had leaked out to me. Mom
and dad had wanted to engineer a time for this revelation so I’d
grasp the implication. I didn't really understand it then, at
four. Was Jessica adopted too? (She's my younger sister. I have
since learned that many adopted kids are in families where
parents have other biological kids after the adoption.) No, Jess
was born to mom and dad directly.
Being adopted meant I was special because I was chosen. But I
always felt like I belonged and was loved as much as Jess, or
Corrie -- our beagle -- who was always getting into terrible
trouble. When I was bad, I got scolded, and then hugged too, just
like Corrie. For a while I thought they might love me more than
Jess because everyone said what gorgeous eyelashes I had and what
a wonderful voice (I was always singing). But then Jess got a
little older, and she had lots of personality (it runs in the
family even if it isn't genetic), and pretty soon adults fussed
over us about equally.
What did become clear over the next year or two was that mom and
dad weren't going to have any more children -- and especially a
little brother. I asked for one three Christmases in a row but
Santa brought dump trucks and a really neat toboggan instead. So
after a time I stopped asking mom and dad for a brother. The
last time I asked mom if we could to go to the place they got me
and pick another boy out her face went all funny and she almost
started to cry.
But I never stopped longing for a brother, a playmate who was a
guy, like me. I was also growing up gay, without knowing what
that was about. I had constant crushes on other boys and, yah,
sometimes I skipped rope with the girls. I wasn't crazy about
team sports except that I got to be closer to Henry or George or
Sandy. Sandy and I walked home from school most days. Geez he was
cute! At ten, he had the most seductive smile and girlish
laughter. I used to tickle him just to hear him squeal and
giggle. Our parents just thought we were buds but on a deep
unspoken level we both knew there was something else going on.
Sandy was cool, but he wasn't the brother I had wanted. So I
invented one.
Jeff was all those things I wanted to be and that I imagined a
younger brother would fill in my life. My sister Jess and I
played a little but Jeff and I had adventures. Of course, it was
all in my mind -- and in countless scriblings and drawings.
Sometimes I'd stand on a stool and look in the bathroom mirror
and imagine Jeff's nose and ears and neck and how they would be
like mine, but not like mine. As I entered my teen years, and
puberty, I returned to the mirror and, stroking my side or chest,
wondered what it would be like to touch Jeff. Oh how I longed to
go camping with him, or canoeing, or build a tree fort -- all
that stuff I saw on TV, pure Brady Bunch stuff, that I knew I was
missing. But at least I could have Jeff in my dreams.
Soon I was in high school and my crushes on other boys became
pretty serious. Scott, the junior quarterback, sat right next to
me in Physics. He had an amazing scent -- boyish, manly, sweet --
and his longish straight brown hair (this was the late 70s) fell
over his eyes seductively. He was always brushing it away with
his squarish fingers and when I caught his brown eyes staring
right back at me I'd blush. Every time! Occasionally he'd ask me
to explain something to him in class, and sit even closer, our
legs touching. I don't know if he ever knew I had painfully
intense erections around him but I sure did!
Sandy and I continued to hang out and after his voice changed --
and he shot up taller than me -- I stopped trying to tickle him.
We'd wrestle afterschool sometimes but I always seemed to want to
lose and just be held by him. After a while we stopped doing that,
too. He did kiss me once, I think I was probably about 15, and it
was incredible; he drove his tongue into my mouth as I gasped but
hungrily wanted more. For a brief moment I thought that this is
what it would be like to have Jeff kiss me. Sometimes we'd hold
hands after that when we were alone but we never did anything
more. At the end of grade 12, Sandy died in a car crash. I am
sure he was gay but I don't think he ever acted on it.
In a number of ways, the imaginary Jeff and real-life Sandy
became one person in my heart and losing him was a trigger to try
to let go of my imaginary brother. I was already 17, and more or
less fully grown, though I wasn't really shaving yet. And now
when I looked in the mirror I only seemed to see me. Except when
I would look directly into my own eyes and then I'd get a
terrible lump in my throat. I started to wonder about my
biological mom and dad, what colour eyes they might have, and if
there was a real life brother out there, somewhere, growing up
with them. Oh, I loved my parents, and I was cared for and loved
back -- but still I knew I was missing something.
Soon I was in college and made some new friends and, in my second
year, I officially came out. I was lucky to be living in a big
city like Toronto where I could get lost in a new environment and
make many friends all at the same time. Mom and dad were
marvelous in accepting my homosexuality and even invited Brad, my
first real boyfriend, to come to the cottage during the summer.
We were given our own bedroom without a fuss. My mom even gave me
knowing winks as we turned in for the night.
I got a decent job out of college, and made new friends, and for a
couple of years tried living on the west coast. That's where I met
Michael. Gawd! Was he hot! He was just 18 months younger than me,
incredibly smart, had the most adorable eyelashes and a wicked
smile. His voice was musical and manly and when I first heard it
my knees went weak. And oh my! His green eyes were to die for! No
doubt he had broken a lot of hearts, as he would mine. There was
something deep about him though; he wasn't just a sexy party boi.
He got involved with some local gay groups and organized bikeathons
to raise money. He was athletic, and so incredibly full of life. I
was in love almost immediately. Unfortunately, lots of people felt
that way when they met Michael.
For some reason, he and I only ever made love once and it sure
wasn't for my lack of trying. We kissed sometimes and would get
all hot and bothered, still fully clothed, and then he'd pull back
and look into my eyes, taking my jaw tenderly in his hands, and
kiss my cheek, then whisper in my ear "Jase, you're too special. I
love you, but not that way." I cried terribly the first time he
said that to me, and didn't understand. But I had to accept it.
Besides, I knew Michael was in a strange way a manifestation of
Jeff, and the way we played, hung out and slept near one another,
sometimes cradling the other, partly clothed, brought a peace to
my life I had not felt before.
In April, 1991, while I was still living in Vancouver but planning
to move back to Toronto -- a great job offer had come through and I
really hated the rain -- Michael and I finally got carried away in
a pretty trashed drunken state. His skin fully against mine was
electric and, despite being half out of it, was the greatest sex
I'd ever had. The best part was the feeling that I'd found, however
briefly, that missing part of me. At one point, while he was in the
height of passion, and I was feeling him deeply inside me, our eyes
opened at just the same time and we just stared at each other. I
drew him tighter to me and we kissed and kissed and rocked back and
forth, our eyes locked to the other. When we finally reached
release, his eyes fluttered shut momentarily, then returned deeply
into mine and we collapsed, sweaty, spent, alive. But that look!
There was a hunger, and a sameness, and a recognition that neither
of us would feel again.
I could happily have died right then and there in his arms. But I
didn't.
Somehow, in the move back to Toronto, I lost touch with Michael.
Mail was returned and friends of ours didn't know where he went. I
felt sick and worried he might have been beaten up or killed. It
wasn't like him to drop out of sight; then again, he was a free
spirit. I didn't forget about Michael, but my life moved on and
after a time I was involved with someone new and very special. And
my career was firing on all cylinders, too, so I had less time to
grieve Michael's loss.
That is, until I got a call, one early gray morning in November,
around 6 am. It was Michael. He sounded terribly weak, desperately
lonely.
"Jase ... "
I recognized his voice instantly and my heart sank. "Michael?!?
Where the heck are you?" I cried out into the phone.
"Back in Van, babe. I've done a lot of soul searching. I need you
to know how much I love you. How much our time together was the
most peaceful time I've ever had. How much the time we made love
was ...." and his voice trailed off.
"Michael, you sound sick. Are you being taken care of? Do you
need anything?"
"Oh god, yah, I need something. I need real peace. And it's coming,
sweet Jase."
"What the hell do you mean by that?!?" My voice was filled with
anger and sorrow and most of all fear.
"I'm dying and I'm not waiting. I won't waste away like some of our
friends. I wanted to hear your voice one more time, Jase. I love you.
I won't be able to hug you again but I am doing that now in my heart.
I love you."
We hung on the line without speaking for a long time. I couldn't find
any words. I loved him too much to fight him; I knew when he made a
really deep decision, it was not to be unmade.
Quietly, I found some words and in a very tiny voice I said "I love
you, Michael. I love you like the brother I never had and always
wanted." And I started to sing, softly, a special song we had shared
together. I heard him start to sob on the other end of the line and
then, softly, "Good bye, Jase" and the dial-tone returned abruptly.
Having recently turned 30, Michael's death made me aware of my own
mortality for the first time. Looking again into the mirror, I
wondered if he were looking back into my eyes. And I started to feel,
every now and again, a creak here and there in my bones. I was still
a young man ... but I was no longer a very young man. That longing,
lonely yearning to know about my roots returned with a vengeance.
And now with a sense of urgency, too. If I sought my birth mom and
dad, would they still be alive?
But then career issues took over, and as I licked my wounds, and made
new friends, the need to know my roots, my parents, faded a little.
I kept a picture of Michael in my bedroom, the one with one eye
partially shut, laughing that wicked laugh of his, a beer bottle in
one hand and a cowboy hat rakishly tilted to one side. Four more
years passed and then, one night, I awoke in a terrible sweat. I
cried out as I opened my eyes -- I was certain I could see Michael,
shirtless and sassy, at the end of the bed. And the words fell from
his lips: "Find your mom. Hurry." I scrambled up to greet him,
kneeling, and blinked at him, reaching out. "Michael?!?" I howled.
And for just a fraction of a second I thought I felt his strong, warm
arms around me again, his scent wafting over me, subtly, but
unmistakably. And then he was gone. Again.
Please see Part Two.
Alexander Inglis (November 18, 2002),
In Toronto
-- 30 --