Your mom took my hand there and then and prayed, Lord Jesus, please heal James of his homosexual desires.
,
,
Friends
Jesus, I say. That’s not how it works.
I get up and go to the living room and lay down on the futon, but my feet hang off the end and the noise from the hallway bangs through the wall.
I go to the bathroom. I lay a towel down in the tub and climb in and eventually I fall asleep with my head next to the bottle of strawberry shampoo that you had brought.
Once my second serious girlfriend asked me, as she was writing her master’s thesis on medieval literature, how I would define friendship. A friend is someone who sticks closer than a brother,I said, offhand, remembering Bible verses from Sunday school. A cord of three strands cannot be easily broken.
Jesus, where do you get this stuff? she said.
A few hours later, I hear you wake up and begin opening cabinets, trying to find tea. You have a flight to catch, back to your parents who still think you have a drinking problem.
In high school, after I came out, my parents made me go to reparative therapy. I was supposed to discuss all of my sinful thoughts and the lack of positive feminine affirmation in my childhood.
You offered to drive me to the appointments. We would go to the correct strip mall, but instead of walking through the tinted door of Live Hope Christian Counseling, we went to Dairy Queen and drank milkshakes for approximately twenty-five minutes.
It was the most scandalous thing you’d ever done. Also, lying to your mom about why I was in therapy.
Once, sitting in the vinyl booth at Dairy Queen, you told me how pretty you thought Keira Knightley was.
If I wasn’t a Christian, I think I would be gay too, you said.
I should have said, Obviously. Or I should have told you then that that wasn’t how it worked—or explained the spectrum, or asked more questions, or whatever—but in small-town Oklahoma, what did either of us know?
I was just trying to survive, and stay in touch with you.
Sleepovers, boyfriends, girlfriends, first kisses, countless Sundays trying to sit still in church: always together, right?
My parents figured out that I was skipping therapy. We didn’t see each other again for a while.
Slowly, my parents relaxed. They met my girlfriend. Eventually, they liked her. You did, too.
Then there was college, and relationships, and your mission trip.
I get up. You make me toast. We look out of the window and listen to the traffic.
Finally you stand up and grab your worn duffel bag, a relic from that dumbass Christian dance team we were both on. Anyways, thanks for letting me stay, you say.
I nod.
So, stay in touch?
I said yes, but I haven’t heard from you since.
So I went back to the Met and got a croissant and a postcard with Madame X on the front. It’s the version Singer Sargent originally painted, with the shoulder strap slipped off. I click open my pen and write your address on the back. I’m writing to tell you, of course.
We’ll stay friends, right? you said on high school graduation day.
Sure, I said.
I meant to tell you, all those times, of course. Of course I know you like women, sometimes. Of course I know we’ll still be friends. Of course you can stay. Of course I’ll be okay, and of course you will be too. Of course of course of course.
A journalist and writer from the Flyover States. Always looking for the story within a story and a better cup of coffee. Ask me about late Roman history. Find me in The Columbia Missourian, Vox Magazine, The Kansas City Star, Epiphany Magazine.