FRESH
YARN presents:
My
Son the Burglar, Revisited
By Greg
Chandler
I went to
preschool in Arcadia, a Los Angeles suburb, or "bedroom community"
as it was known in the seventies. Life was peachy and uncomplicated until
my nineteen-year-old Aunt Kristen, Mom's little sister, took off with
a band of girlfriends for a year-long backpacking journey across Europe.
We were close, and she often took me all the way to Balboa just for a
chocolate-dipped frozen banana. Europe meant nothing to my young mind.
It was probably like Pomona, or maybe La Cañada. My world was small.
That was until the postcards started to arrive. Lisbon. Roma. Heidelberg.
Hydra. No cartoon or pop-up book had ever inspired me as much as knowing
that magical places really existed, that you could go to them. The cards
were lovingly entered into a rattan-covered scrapbook my mother bought
for me at Aaron Brothers. My aunt must have been snorting espresso the
entire trip because cards arrived every two or three days. Her handwriting
was bubbly to the extreme and hard to read, though I eventually memorized
what was written on the cards with some help from Mom. Reading them over
and over before bed made for epic dreams. The one with a picture of Lake
Zurich on it was my favorite.
Guten
Tag,
You would love the lake here. We took a ferry across. I could see the
Alps. Me & Shelly got stuck at the top of a Ferris wheel. She threw
up over the side & it landed on a Swiss man. When we got off the man
chased us. We hid in a girls bathroom. Five of us are sleeping in one
room with a triple bunk & double bunk. No one wants the third bunk.
A pigeon came in the window. Camela wrapped it in a towel & got rid
of it. Rats with wings. I went to a concert in the park of singers from
Swaziland, Africa. I got lost. Took a cab to the hostel. My friends called
the police. I went to a museum where you walk inside an exact replica
of the human body.
Love,
Kristen
I gave up
swings and freeze tag for a ten-pound Rand McNally, studied and planned
my own trips, and in the process became an expert on European geography.
Like many Americans before me -- Mark Twain, Henry James, and Gertrude
Stein to name but a few -- I became obsessed with that faraway continent,
the difference being that I'd only just learned the alphabet. I don't
know if it was the pictures of ancient ruins calling out to one of my
past lives, or the group shot of the Norwegian men's Olympic swim team
kindling something vague and still unknown in me. All I know is that I
had to get to Europe before kindergarten or I'd just die. By the time
my aunt returned home -- with a Joan Jett haircut and bangles jangling
from her wrists to her elbows -- I had two scrapbooks packed with 141
postcards.
I was cute,
so my parents tell me, when I entertained their dinner guests, usually
drab members of some local Republican club, with travel tips for the French
Riviera. I thought everyone was trying to get to Europe and would appreciate
my insider knowledge. One night I hid in the kitchen and listened to the
adults after one of my presentations. I felt sick to my stomach when I
heard a woman ask Mom, her tone rather disgusted, "Do kids tease
him?" My poor mother hadn't a clue what this pucker-faced busybody
was trying to intimate.
"You
need to get him into football fast."
"But
he's only four."
"There's a peewee league now. Look into it."
They did,
and soon I was in the unfortunate position of spending my weekends as
a running back. But only for a few years. At the age of seven I was free
to give up football for soccer. I had high hopes for this European game,
but quickly realized all team sports disagreed with my personality.
Five or six
years later, there was a picture of C. Thomas Howell from The Outsiders
on my bedroom door. Maps not just of Europe but of all the continents
and several countries were pinned to the wall. Out-of-date Fodor's guides
bought at garage sales lined the bookshelves. Mom had caught the decorating
bug, and after redoing our house twice she confidently opened her own
business. My brother was six and a star hitter in T-ball. Aunt Kristen
decided she didn't like traveling after all, and that Europe was "dirty."
She went to nursing school, married a radiologist, and filled her closet
with Laura Ashley dresses. By this point I'd given up on my parents taking
me "overseas" anytime soon. Mom was interested but Dad was decidedly
against it. Maybe after he retired the two of them would go. It looked
like I'd have to do it on my own like my aunt. In the meantime I did the
next best thing: I planned detailed trips right down to my airline seat
(1A on Air France) and the restaurants I'd eat at, such as Casa Botín
in Madrid, the oldest restaurant in Europe. I'd rent a barge on the Canal
du Nivernais, check out Pippi's Villa Villekulla in Vimmerby, Sweden,
or the Cosmic Club in Rimini, Italy, the hippest disco in the world.
I wonder
why I felt so discontented in the San Gabriel Valley? Was it a result
of playing soccer and baseball back-to-back (I did manage to escape football)
since that shrew at the dinner party had enlightened Mom? Sometimes it
was fun, like the team pizza parties at Shakey's, but mostly I played
to please my family. Was I simply reacting to my hum-drum environment?
I was definitely fanciful, which resulted in a few enemies at school.
Namely Jason O. who liked to follow me home throwing pebbles at my back.
There were no bullies in Europe, of that I was certain.
I was very
close to my maternal grandparents who always encouraged my curious nature.
Around this time, when I was about ten, they went on vacation to Hawaii.
I hadn't given the fiftieth state a moment's thought. But when they returned
with pictures of tropical grottos, Tiki villages, and pikaki-scented tales
of nights spent dancing to Don Ho's live rendition of "Tie a Yellow
Ribbon Round the Ole Oak Tree," Hawaii became, for a while, my new
number one travel obsession. Imagining my grandparents there as I'd done
with my aunt in Europe, having a ball, basking in magic, was very powerful
for me. My parents were relieved that the Bulgarian Tourist Board in Sophia
stopped sending me suspicious looking manila envelopes covered with stamps
of Lenin and packed with unattractive holiday brochures. Hawaii was part
of America. My grandparents went there, the neighbors went there, Elvis
went there. It was healthy, normal, and close.
At that time,
Tuesdays were the highlight of the week. My grandmother would pick me
up from school and off we'd go to Cost Plus or to pick up a repaired vacuum.
Back at the house, I'd work on elaborate travel itineraries at the kitchen
table while my grandmother cooked dinner and asked pertinent questions.
I loved being there. I always felt like an adult.
One such
Tuesday, a couple weeks before the end of fifth grade and the beginning
of summer break, my grandfather Jack and I sat on the edge of their pool
with our legs dangling in. In hot weather we always took a swim before
dinner. He had his acoustic guitar. I had the ukulele they brought me
from the Islands. The three of us ate Waldorf salad and brisket of beef
outside under the citronella tiki torches. After dinner, with their short-tempered
Lhasa Apso, Kashi, on a short leash, my grandfather and I walked to Thrifty
Drugs for an ice cream cone. Two scoops of Cinnamon Swirl for me, two
scoops of Mint Chip for him. We walked back listening to the crickets
and sprinklers. I don't know what came over me. "Pop," I said,
"I thought of a way to get to Hawaii." He asked how, and I told
him flat out: "I'll take the money from my mom's purse."
"You
think that's a good idea?" he asked.
My favorite
song came to mind, and I sang it: "Mele Kalikimaka is the thing
to say on a bright Hawaiian Christmas Day. That's the island greeting
that we send to you from the land where palm trees sway."
At
nine o'clock my grandfather drove me home. At two I woke up, got out of
bed, and tiptoed down the hallway. I wasn't afraid, I was possessed. I
have no idea what I planned to do once I had the money. Ride my bike to
LAX? I'd never stolen anything before.
I entered
my parents' bedroom. I heard breathing. It was very dark but I could just
make out Mom's purse on the highboy. I reached up and grabbed the heavy
leather bag. Right at that moment dad shot up in bed. I dropped the purse
and ran back to my room, got under the covers and waited for a confrontation.
Having left my door open I saw dad slinking down the hallway in his boxers
with a pistol out in front of him. He checked on my younger brother, glanced
into my room, and searched the house. Within ten minutes I heard men's
voices and walkie-talkies, the unmistakable sound of cops. Now I was really
terrified. At this point Mom entered my room. She sat on my bed in the
dark, hugged me, and tried to explain, without scaring me too much, that
we had a burglar. I started to cry and between sobs told her that I was
the burglar. She informed Dad. The cops left. My parents turned on my
hula girl lamp. I spilled the beans, every detail. They were more concerned
than mad. Was I "mental"? A jewel thief in training? The incident
wasn't mentioned again. Self-conscious, I toned down my interest in Hawaii
and all things travel-related. I spent the summer attending soccer day
camp and reading Arthur Conan Doyle.
Not long
after entering the sixth grade I came home from school one day, and saw
on the kitchen table an open letter from Reader's Digest addressed
to my dad. It was a rejection letter for an essay he'd submitted called
"My Son the Burglar." I felt lightheaded and queasy, confused
and a bit frightened. The room started to lose color and my eyes sank
back into my head. At least the story wouldn't be read by millions of
people, I thought. I never mentioned to my parents that I'd seen the letter.
The following
summer we finally took a trip. Even though it was only to Northern
California, I couldn't have been more excited. I checked out dozens of
books from the library and got free maps from the Auto Club. We stayed
in Mammoth for a few days visiting friends of my parents with kids my
age. One afternoon a group of about twenty adults and kids piled into
a couple RVs and headed into the backcountry for a picnic. It was the
most beautiful place I'd ever been. A genuine alpine pasture with a bubbling
brook, miles of wildflowers, and a million-dollar view. I was having a
wonderful time building dams and catching pollywogs with the other kids,
watching the adults drink chardonnay and sing-along to the music of John
Denver. The picnic lunch was served on various plaid and paisley blankets
spread over soft grass. It was at this picnic that I had my first sundried
tomato, on a cracker smeared with cream cheese I believe.
Dad had more
than a few glasses of wine, and decided to entertain the large gathering
of people with a detailed account of the "My Son the Burglar"
story. He started with my obsession for all things Hawaiian. How I'd been
writing to Doris Duke hoping for an invitation to Shangri La, her palace
outside Honolulu. How I'd memorized the phone numbers of every five-star
resort. All eyes were on me. I turned bright red, of course, and soon
felt as if I were melting like the Wicked Witch of the West. I couldn't
take it anymore. I threw my cold chicken leg into the brook and stormed
off to the RV. I locked myself inside and cried. I couldn't wait to tell
my grandparents how rotten I'd been treated. Soon my mother and little
brother knocked on the door. I wouldn't let them in. Eventually I calmed
down but I couldn't face the others. The next day we were back on the
road, just the four of us.
The incident was never mentioned again.
During high school I worked fifteen hours a week shelving books at the
public library. I had a knack for saving money back then. After graduation
I finally went to Europe. Two fun-loving, rebellious friends, both of
them girls, and I flew into Madrid. Jetlagged, stoned on hash, we ate
our first dinner at Casa Botín. Over our third pitcher of sangria
I wrote to Aunt Kristen on a Botín postcard.
Dear Kristen,
I'm here! EUROPA! Thanks to you. If it wasn't for your postcards when
I was little I wouldn't be here. I'd be on my butt watching old movies
all summer. So far everything's amazing. It's so old & cool &
medieval. Love the narrow carless alleyways. We were grossed out at first
by the whole BABY pig they brought us, but actually it was yum. Remember
when you got locked in a dept. store overnight? Was it El Corte Inglés?
If YES it's across from our hotel.
Love, Greg
One day not
long after I returned from Europe, I was sitting on my Mom's bed rambling
on about what I should do with my life as I watched her paint little flowers
on a lampshade. There was a lull in the conversation as I tried to formulate
excuses for not having applied to college, when she blurted out the following:
"Honey, did you know, well, you don't know, but you were an adorable
little adopted baby."
It should
go without saying that I was beyond shocked. My parents had decided it
was best to keep this news from me until I was eighteen so I wouldn't
feel like a weirdo growing up. Their plan backfired -- of course I felt
like a weirdo growing up. But my anger at them was short-lived. They meant
well. If anything, it freed me. I finally knew why I was so different
from my family.
I don't embarrass
easily anymore, except around my parents. I fear our bond is more tenuous
now and my inability to broach the past with them, including my entry
into this world, only contributes to that feeling. We've perfected surface
talk. Yet I sense a crack forming, and know that if I don't open up, that
if I don't start talking, our relationship will eventually evaporate.
In the years since that first trip abroad and the revelation that followed,
I've done a lot of globetrotting, a lot of wandering. I became a writer,
fell in love. I never thought it could happen, but my desire to travel
has started to wane. I seek a new kind of adventure now, one that involves
forging an open dialogue with my adoptive parents and finding my birth
parents. Paris is wonderful, the Alps are transcendent, but I can't imagine
anything more electrifying than meeting, for the first time, the people
who created me; the weirdos who spawned me.
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