Garth Barclay was
my first platonic boyfriend, in grade 6. He had dark, curly hair, as I did. He
had good looks, he was popular. He needed to shave, in grade 6. (I'm not sure boys
ever shaved in 6th grade, but that is my mental picture of him)
He looked like
me and I looked like him, amazingly so from all reports. He was my first, and
only, twin experience thus far. (Well, not exactly, but we’ll get to that much
later) We used to drive the teachers nuts. They couldn't tell us a part. “Garth,
Christian? Christian, Garth?”
"Which
one are you? Christian or Garth?" asked the library teacher. "I can
never tell you two a part. I wish you’d stop coming in together."
It would make
us both smile.
We both liked
it. We used to find each other to stand in line together. I remember us holding hands, but that is
probably me and we probably didn't. (Then again, in grade 6?) We were inseparable
all year. We had the twin thing going on there for a while.
Garth was boistrous,
he played football at lunch times. He always came in for the afternoon with his
shirt tail hanging out. But he was sweet to me, as I was sweet to him. (sweet
on him) We had our own thing going on. We always sat together, we wanted to be
bookends. Old Dickson used to get furious.
Albert Dickson
was our 6th grade teacher and my nemesis. He was cruel and
vindictive.
"If you
dear boys do insist on sitting together," he'd whine like Bernard King.
"Although, why a thoroughly nice boy like Garth wants to sit next to a
thoroughly horrible boy like Christian – the old bastard hated me - "I
will never understand." I think he could sniff a younger, cuter, smarter
gay boy present and used to think, I have
to tear him down, for my own preservation – "You will have to wear
name tags."
"If one
of us is thoroughly horrible and one of us is thoroughly nice," I would
ask cheekily. "Why do we have to wear name tags?"
"Thank
you Christian," he'd spit back. "I can pick horrible, when I hear
it."
Garth would
rub my back when Dickson was mean to me, Garth was my hero, he'd always find
me, we'd always hang together.
I got shingles
that year, from being forced to spar beyond my years, by a biter old homophobe,
married forty years with children – in his polyester suits and cravats and his
coiffured grey hair. (The man was the biggest closet homo, I don't know how
people couldn't see it?).
Both our
mothers picked the wrong one of us as their son, in the school photo. It was a
set-up. We asked them pointedly. I was amazed when Garth told me.
"My mum
picked you, saying it was me." I was taken aback when my mum did the same
thing, even if Lottie only hesitated over Garth and then picked me. After
which, I remember I sighed in relief.
Garth went to
a high school from year 7. His parents could no longer afford the fees, or
something, I can't really remember now. All I heard was that he was leaving. We
were both devastated. We said, "Twins forever," the day he left. We
shazambed! our knuckles afterwards, in silence. We gazed at each other for the
longest time, our last time together, before Garth's mother pulled him away by
the hand. I watched him go, as he did me.
I've never had
another twin – everyone would say years later that David Sweetman looked like
my brother, but never another twin. I wonder if Garth still remembers? I wonder
if he still looks like me?
2 comments:
Ohhh.. have you tried googling him? Fairly scary what you can dig up online! Or maybe a school reunion coming up?
I don't remember ever being told I look like someone my age... I don't know if that's a good thing or a bad thing!
New reader here... hello!
Gus
Hi Gus, nice to meet you
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