They call me King Dork.
Well, let me put it another way: no one ever actually calls me King Dork. It’s how I refer to myself in my head, a silent protest and an acknowledgment of reality at the same time. I don’t command a nerd army, or preside over a realm of the socially ill-equipped. I’m small for my age, young for my grade, uncomfortable in most situations, nearsighted, skinny, awkward and nervous. And no good at sports. So Dork is accurate. The King part is pure sarcasm, though: there’s nothing special or ultimate about me. I’m generic. It’s more like I’m one of the kings in a pack of crazy, backwards playing cards, designed for a game where anyone who gets me automatically loses the hand. I mean, everything beats me, even twos and threes.
I suppose I fit the traditional mould of the brainy, freaky, oddball kid who reads too much, so bright that his genius is sometimes mistaken for just being retarded. I know a lot of trivia, and I often use words that sound made up but that actually turn out to be in the dictionary, to everyone’s surprise – but I can never quite manage to keep my shoes tied or figure out anything to say if someone addresses me directly. I play it up. It’s all I’ve got going for me and, if a guy can manage to leave the impression that his awkwardness arises from some kind of deep or complicated soul, why not go for it? But, I admit, most of the time, I walk around here feeling like a total idiot.
Most people in the world outside my head know me as Moe, even though my real name is Tom. Moe isn’t a normal nickname. It’s more like an abbreviation, short for Chi-Mo. And even that’s an abbreviation for something else.
Often, when people hear ‘Chi-Mo’ they’ll smile and say, ‘Hippie parents?’ I never know what to say to that because yes, my folks are more hippie than not, but, no, that’s not where the name comes from.
Chi-Mo is derogatory, though you wouldn’t necessarily know that unless you heard the story behind it. Yet even those who don’t know the specific story can sense its dark origins, which is why it has held on for so long. They get a kick out of it without really knowing why. Maybe they notice me wincing when I hear them say it, but I don’t know: there are all sorts of reasons I could be wincing. Life is a wince-a-thon.
There’s a list of around thirty or forty supposedly insulting things that people have called me that I know about, past and present, and a lot of them are way worse than Moe. Some are classic and logical, like Hender-pig, Hender-fag or Hender-fuck. Some are based on jokes or convoluted theories of offensiveness that are so retarded no one could ever hope to understand them. Like Sheepie. Figure that one out and you win a prize. As for Chi-Mo, it goes all the way back to the seventh grade, and it wouldn’t even be worth mentioning except for the fact that this particular nickname ended up playing an unexpectedly prominent role in the weird stuff that happened towards the end of this school term. So, you know, I thought I’d mention it.
Mr Teone, the associate principal for the ninth and tenth grades, always refers to Sam Hellerman as Peggy. I guess he’s trying to imply that Sam Hellerman looks like a girl. Well, okay, so maybe Sam Hellerman does look a little like a girl in a certain way, but that’s not the point.
In fact, Mr Teone happens to have a huge rear end and pretty prominent man boobs, and looks way more like a lady than Sam Hellerman ever could unless he were to gain around two hundred pounds and start a course of hormone therapy. Clearly, he’s trying to draw attention away from his own non-traditionally gendered form factor by focusing on the alleged femininity of another. Though why he decided to pick on Sam Hellerman as part of his personal battle against his own body image remains a mystery.
I’m just glad it’s not me who gets called Peggy, because who needs it?
There’s always a bit of suspense about the particular way in which a given school year will get off to a bad start.
This year, it was an evil omen, like when druids observe an owl against the moon in the first hour of Samhain and conclude that a grim doom awaits the harvest. That kind of thing can set the tone for the rest of the year. What I’m getting at is, the first living creature Sam Hellerman and I encountered when we penetrated the school grounds on the first day of school was none other than Mr Teone.
The sky seemed suddenly to darken.
We were walking past the faculty parking, and he was seated in his beat-up ’93 Geo Prizm, struggling to force his supersized body through the open car door. We hurried past, but he noticed us just as he finally squeezed through. He stood by the car, panting heavily from the effort and trying to tuck his shirt into his trousers so that it would stay in for longer than a few seconds.
‘Good morning, Peggy,’ he said to Sam Hellerman. ‘So you decided to risk another year.’ He turned to me and bellowed: ‘Henderson!’ Then he did this big theatrical salute and waddled away, laughing to himself.
He always calls me by my last name and he always salutes. Clearly, mocking me and Sam Hellerman is more important than the preservation of his own dignity. He seems to consider it to be part of his job. Which tells you just about everything you need to know about Hillmont High School society.
It could be worse. Mr Donnelly, PE teacher and sadist supreme, along with his jabbering horde of young sports troglodytes-in-training, never bother with Moe or Peggy, and they don’t salute. They prefer to say ‘pussy’ and hit you on the ear with a cupped palm. According to an article called ‘Physical Interrogation Techniques’ in one of my magazines (Today’s Mercenary), this can cause damage to the eardrum and even death when applied accurately. But Mr Donnelly and his minions are not in it for the accuracy. They operate on pure, mean-spirited, status-conscious instinct, which usually isn’t very well thought out. Lucky for me they’re so poorly trained, or I’d be in big trouble.
But there’s no point fretting about what people call you. Enough ill will can turn anything into an attack. Even your own actual name.
‘I think he’s making fun of your army coat,’ said Sam Hellerman as we headed inside. Maybe that was it. I admit, I did look a little silly in the coat, especially since I hardly ever took it off, even in the hottest weather. I couldn’t take it off, for reasons I’ll get to in a bit.
I know Sam Hellerman because he was the guy right before me in alphabetical order from the fourth through eighth grades. You spend that much time standing next to somebody, you start to get used to each other.
He’s the closest thing I have to a friend, and he’s an all-right guy. I don’t know if he realizes that I don’t bring much to the table, friendship-wise. I let him do most of the talking. I usually don’t have a comment.
‘There’s no possibility of life on other planets in this solar system,’ he’ll say.
Silence.
‘Well, let me rephrase that. There’s no possibility of carbon-based life on other planets in this solar system.’
‘Really?’ I’ll say, after a few beats.
‘Oh, yeah,’ he’ll say. ‘No chance.’
He always has lots to say. He can manage for both of us. We spend a lot of time over at each other’s houses watching TV and playing games. There’s a running argument about whose house is harder to take. Mine is goofy and resembles an insane asylum; his is silent and grim and forbidding, and bears every indication of having been built on an ancient Indian burial ground. We both have a point, but he usually wins and comes to my house because I’ve got a TV in my room and he doesn’t. TV can really take the edge off. Plus, he has a taste for prescription tranquillizers, and my mom is his main unwitting supplier.
Sam Hellerman and I are in a band. I mean, we have a name and a logo and the basic design for the first three or four album covers. We change the name a lot, though. A typical band lasts around two weeks, and some don’t even last long enough for us to finish designing the logo, let alone the album covers.
When we arrived at school that first day, right at the end of August, the name was Easter Monday. But Easter Monday only lasted from first period through lunch, when Sam Hellerman took out his notebook in the cafeteria and said, ‘Easter Monday is kind of gay. How about Baby Batter?’
I nodded. I was never that wild about Easter Monday, to tell you the truth. Baby Batter was way better. By the end of lunch, Sam Hellerman had already made a rough sketch of the logo, which was Gothic lettering inside the loops of an infinity symbol. That’s the great thing about being in a band: you always have a new logo to work on.
‘When I get my bass,’ Sam Hellerman said, pointing to another sketch he had been working on, ‘I’m going to spraypaint “baby” on it. Then you can spraypaint “batter” on your guitar and, as long as we stay on our sides of the stage, we won’t need a banner when we play on TV.’
I didn’t even bother to point out that by the time we got instruments and were in a position to worry about what to paint on them for TV appearances the name Baby Batter would be long gone. This was for notebook purposes only. I decided my Baby Batter stage name would be Guitar Guy, which Sam Hellerman carefully wrote down for the first album credits. He said he hadn’t decided on a stage name yet, but he wanted to be credited as playing ‘base and Scientology’. That Sam Hellerman. He’s kind of brilliant in his way.
‘Know any drummers?’ he asked as the bell rang, as he always does. Of course, I didn’t. I don’t know anyone apart from Sam Hellerman.
THE CATCHER CULT
So that’s how the school year began, with Easter Monday fading into Baby Batter. I like to think of those first few weeks as the Baby Batter Weeks. Nothing much happened – or rather, quite a lot of stuff was happening, as it turns out, but I wouldn’t find out about any of it till later. So, for me, the Baby Batter Weeks were characterized by a false sense of – well, not security. More like familiarity or monotony. The familiar monotony of standard, generic High School Hell, which somehow manages to be horrifying and tedious at the same time. We attended our inane, pointless classes, in between which we did our best to dodge random attempts on our lives and dignity by our psychopathic social superiors. After school, we worked on our band, played games and watched TV. Just like the previous year. There was no indication that anything would be any different.
Now, when I say our classes were inane and pointless, I really mean i. and p., and in the fullest sense. Actually, you know what? Before I continue, I should probably explain a few things about Hillmont High School, because your school might be different.
Hillmont is hard socially, but the ‘education’ part is shockingly easy. That goes by the official name of Academics. It is mystifying how they manage to say that with a straight face, because, as a school, HHS is more or less a joke. Which can’t be entirely accidental. I guess they want to tone down the content so that no one gets too good at any particular thing, so as not to make anyone else look bad.
Assignments typically involve copying a page or two from some book or other. Sometimes you have a ‘research paper’, which means that the book you copy out of is the Encyclopaedia Britannica. You’re graded on punctuality, being able to sit still and sucking up. In class you have group discussions about whatever it is you’re alleged to be studying, where you try to share with the class your answer to the question: how does it make you feel?
Okay, so that part isn’t easy for me. I don’t like to talk much. But you do get some credit for being quiet and non-disruptive, and my papers are usually neat enough that the teacher will write something like ‘Good format!’ on them.
It is possible, however, to avoid this sort of class altogether by getting into Advanced Placement classes. (Technically, ‘Advanced Placement’ refers to classes for which it is claimed you can receive ‘college credit’ – which is beyond hilarious – but in practise all the non-bonehead classes end up getting called AP.) AP is like a different world. You don’t have to do anything at all, not a single blessed thing but show up, and you always get an A no matter what. Well, you end up making a lot of collages, and dressing in costumes and putting on irritating little skits, but that’s about it. Plus, they invented a whole new imaginary grade, which they still call an A, but which counts as more than an A from a regular class. What a racket.
This is the one place in the high school multi-verse where eccentricity can be an asset. The AP teachers survey the class through their Catcher in the Rye glasses and . . .
Oh, wait: I should mention that The Catcher in the Rye is this book from the fifties. It is every teacher’s favourite book. The main guy is a kind of misfit kid superhero named Holden Caulfield. For teachers, he is the ultimate guy, a real dreamboat. They love him to pieces. They all want to have sex with him, and with the book’s author too, and they’d probably even try to do it with the book itself if they could figure out a way to go about it. It changed their lives when they were young. As kids, they carried it with them everywhere they went. They solemnly resolved that, when they grew up, they would dedicate their lives to spreading The Word.
It’s kind of like a cult.
They live for making you read it. When you do read it you can feel them all standing behind you in a semicircle wearing black robes with hoods, holding candles. They’re chanting ‘Holden, Holden, Holden . . .’ And they’re looking over your shoulder with these expectant smiles, wishing they were the ones discovering the earth-shattering joys of The Catcher in the Rye for the very first time.
Too late, man. I mean, I’ve been around the Catcher in the Rye block. I’ve been forced to read it like three hundred times, and don’t tell anyone but I think it sucks.
Good luck avoiding it, though. If you can make it to puberty without already having become a Catcher in the Rye casualty you’re a better man than I, and I’d love to know your secret. It’s too late for me, but the Future Children of America will thank you.
So the AP teachers examine the class through their Catcher glasses. The most Holden-y kid wins. Dispute the premise of every assignment and try to look troubled and intense, yet with a certain quiet dignity. You’ll be a shoo-in.
Everybody wins, though, really, in AP Land.
But watch out. When all the little Holdens leave the building, it’s open season again. Those who can’t shed or disguise their Catcher-approved eccentricities will be noticed by all the psychopathic normal people and hunted down like dogs. The Catcher Cult sets ’em up, and the psychotic normal people knock ’em right back down. What a world.
‘Did you get in any APs?’ Sam Hellerman had asked on the way to school that first day. He hadn’t got in any APs.
Whether or not you end up in AP is mostly a matter of luck, though the right kind of sucking up can increase your odds a bit. So, considering that I put zero effort into it, I didn’t do too badly in the AP lottery. I got into AP social studies and French; that left me with regular English and math; and I also had PE and band. ‘Advanced’ French is mainly notable for the fact that no one in the class has the barest prayer of reading, speaking or understanding the French language, despite having studied it for several years. AP social studies is just like normal social studies, except the assignments are easier and you get to watch movies. Plus they like to call AP social studies ‘Humanities’. Ahem . . . Pardon me while I spit out this water and laugh uncontrollably for the next twenty minutes or so. This year, ‘Humanities’ began with Foods of the World. The basic idea there is that someone brings in a different type of ethnic food every day. And the class celebrates cultural diversity by eating it. Day one was pineapple and ham, like they have in Hawaii! We were gifted and advanced, all right. And soon we would know how to have a snack in all fifty states.
I suspected regular English was going to be a drag, though, and I wasn’t wrong. AP teachers tend to be younger, more enthusiastic and in pre-meltdown mode. They are almost always committed members of the Catcher Cult, and easy to manipulate. The regular classes, on the other hand, are usually taught by elderly, bitter robots who gave up long ago and who are just biding their time praying for it all to be over. Getting in touch with your inner Holden is totally useless if you wind up in a class taught by one of the bitter robots. You will not compute. Or, if you do compute, the bitter robots will only hate you for it.
I didn’t get into AP English because my try-out essay last year was too complex for the robots to grasp. So I ended up in regular, non-advanced English, run by the ultimate bitter robot, Mr Schtuppe.
‘I don’t give out As like popcorn,’ said Mr Schtuppe on that first day. ‘Neatness counts.
‘Cultivate the virtue of brevity,’ he continued. ‘There will be no speaking out of turn. No shenanigans. No chewing gum: of any kind.
‘Shoes and shirts must be worn. There will be no shorts, bell-bottom trousers or open-toed ladies’ footwear. No tube tops, halter tops or sports attire. Rule number one, if the teacher is wrong see rule number two. Rule number two, ah . . . if you are tardy, the only excuse that will be accepted is a death in the family, and, if that death is your own – mmmm, no, if you die, then that death is, ah, accepted as excusable, mmm . . .’
Mr Schtuppe’s introductory lecture was not only morbid, but had a few glitches, as well.
It was like his bald robot head contained a buggy chunk of code that selected random stuff from some collective pool of things teachers have said since around 1932, strung them together in no particular order in a new temporary text document and fed this document through the speech simulator unit as is. And sometimes there was some corruption in the file, so you’d get things like ‘my way or the freeway’. And, of course, all the girls in the class were in fact wearing halter tops, and practically every guy had on some kind of ‘sports attire’. You can’t have a dress code for just one class. It was nonsense. There must have been a time long ago, in the seventies, I’d guess, when he had been in a position to impose a dress code, and he kept it as part of the introductory speech because – who knows? Maybe he just liked saying ‘open-toed ladies’ footwear’.
Mr Schtuppe was still droning on about forbidden footwear when the bell rang. He stopped mid-sentence (he had just said ‘In case of’) and sat down, staring at his desk with what appeared to be unseeing eyes as the kids filed out. I had a feeling that everyone in that room was thinking pretty much the same thing: it was going to be a long year.
HIGH SCHOOL IS THE PENALTY FOR TRANSGRESSIONS YET TO BE SPECIFIED
Despite the ominous beginning, the first day of school had been refreshingly uneventful and easy to take. So, after weighing our options, we decided to go back and do it all over again the following day.
I had been curious about how Mr Schtuppe would launch day two of English for the Not Particularly Gifted, and I was pleased to note that he stood up at the beginning of the class period and simply resumed in mid-sentence where he had left off the day before.
‘Fire proceed to the exit in an orderly fashion,’ he said. ‘No talking.’ While part of me was a bit envious of the AP English students, who were at that moment probably watching a movie or eating cookies or something, I was mainly just fascinated to watch my own educational train wreck in progress.
Mr Schtuppe had a certain charm, if you looked at the situation in the right spirit. He liked to call the girls guttersnipes and the guys ‘you filthy animals’, and he would say it with this weird smile that made him look like, I don’t know, the devil or something. A shiny pink devil with a lot of ear hair.
First on the programme in Mr Schtuppe’s class, when the introduction had finally ended, was a book called 30 Days to a More Powerful Vocabulary. ‘In thirty days, you will learn how to make words your slaves.’
This book is a big list of fancy-pants words, and our job as self-improvement vocabularists was to prove we knew what they meant by saying them aloud and using them in sentences.
Mr Schtuppe’s unique twist on this was that he managed to mispronounce around half of them.
‘The first word is “bête noire”, ’ he said. But he pronounced it ‘bait noir-ay’, with the emphasis on the ‘ay’.
‘Bait noir-ay,’ we said in unison.
‘Excellent. Now, class, listen carefully: magnaminious . . .’
(We would have to wait till the end of the alphabet before we witnessed Mr Schtuppe’s finest hour. That would be ‘wanton’, which he pronounced like ‘won ton’. The delicious Chinese dumpling often served in soup at the Pacific Rim’s finest eating establishments. That’s why Sam Hellerman and I will sometimes refer to a sexy girl as a Won Ton Woman.)
Of course, if I had known how important mispronunciation skills would prove to be in my sex life and in the events that followed, I probably would have paid more attention. But I spent most of the class in my own zone, thinking about the lyrics of Roxy Music’s ‘She Sells’ and writing out a track list for Baby Batter’s third album, Odd and Even Number.
Note to self: one of these days, my next band is definitely going to be Beat Noir-ay. First album: Talk Won Ton to Me, You Crazy Asian Superstar. Lots of wok solos.
But getting back to Hillmont:
I used to get beat up and hassled a fair amount in elementary and junior high school, but not so much these days. In part, that’s because the normal people of the world, as they mature and become more sophisticated, naturally begin to discover that psychological torture is in the end more satisfying, and easier to get away with, than the application of brute force; and, in part, or so I like to think, it’s because of a special technique I developed last year.
What I mean is, actual balls-out physical attacks, where one guy wins and the other gets beaten to a quivering bloody sock monkey, are rare, though they do happen. It’s usually more subtle than that. They’ll try to trip you as you go by in the hallway; or they’ll throw little rolled-up balls of gum at the back of your head in homeroom; or they’ll write stuff on your locker, or squirt substances like mustard, milk or worse through your locker’s slats; or they’ll superglue your gym locker shut so you can’t get to your street clothes. None of these techniques is all that devastating alone; but repeated endlessly and in tandem, they can build up and start to drive you a bit insane. The basic idea is to wear you down with day-to-day social exclusionary exercises, and the repetition of mind-numbingly similar minor pranks and indignities. It’s all about ritual abuse, mental and emotional stress, psychological torture and humiliation. They really are a great bunch of guys.
The best way to handle such situations is to stare straight ahead and act like you don’t notice or care. Unless you happen to have some serious equalizing firepower. Which I don’t.
My dad always used to say, ‘Fight back,’ but that’s not realistic. Even if you could successfully pretend to be some kind of bad dude there would still be something like eighteen hundred of them and only one of you. On TV, people in that situation claim that they know karate and that their hands are registered as lethal weapons and then they do this yelpy kung fu dance. Someone cues the laugh track and the tension is relieved. Then there’s a commercial, and they don’t show the part where Matt Lynch rides his skateboard on the guy’s face. No thanks.
The only way to get Matt Lynch to leave you alone, if you can’t actually take him out, is to introduce an element of uncertainty into his slow-moving, gummed-up ‘mind’. It turns out Matt Lynch has a fear of uncertainty and the irrational. Raising such doubts is not as hard as you might think, though it took me quite a while to figure that one out.
At the beginning of the school year, all the psychotic normal people are mainly concerned with their own affairs, and even the minor irritants and pranks I’ve described can get off to a slow start. Which is why that first week went by without incident. Well, almost.