Read Michael Thomas Ford - Full Circle Online
Authors: Michael Thomas Ford
"The AIDS thing?" said Jack. "Someone at work mentioned it. Do you think it's true?" "I don't know if he has AIDS," Andy said. "But he's definitely a fag."
"How do you know that?" I asked him.
Andy grinned, dipping his French fries in ketchup and popping them into his mouth. "You did not," I said.
"Did, too," he said. "Twice. At the house in Palm Springs."
I looked across the table at Jack, who in turn looked at Andy. "Well," he said, "how was he?" Andy shrugged. "Not bad," he answered. "Nice ass. Liked to talk dirty."
"He didn't ask you to pretend you were Tab Hunter, did he?" I asked hopefully. We tried to get Andy to give us more dirt on what Rock was like in bed, but he claimed not to remember much. Giving up on that, we began teasing Jack about not having found a boyfriend yet. That conversation continued as we finished up and walked out into the beautiful summer evening.
"Where to now?" I said. "Ty's? Boots & Saddles?" I listed two of the street's more popular bars. "Bras & Girdles?" Andy said. "No thanks."
"Ty's it is, then," I said, steering them toward the small, dark bar favored by locals. We spent the next two hours drinking and trying to find a guy for Jack, to no avail. By the time we left, we were laughing the way we used to, and all our disagreements—both old and new—were forgotten. Jack decided to walk up 7th Avenue to his apartment in Chelsea, and I said good night to Andy at the subway. Then I went home. Alan wasn't back yet, so I turned on the television in the bedroom and watched Remington Steele , fantasizing about Pierce Brosnan's hairy chest, then Charlie Chan at the Olympics . I fell asleep halfway through, waking with a start when I heard the front door open.
Rock's story turned out to be not so funny. I won my bet with Alan when Hudson's camp vocally denied that he had AIDS, saying that he was in Paris for treatment of liver cancer. But the jig was up not long after, and finally almost all of America knew someone with AIDS. And as Hudson's Hollywood friends, including Elizabeth Taylor, began speaking publicly about the need to find a cure for the disease, it seemed his illness might provide the push needed to end the epidemic. Alan won his twenty dollars back the following week when I received a call from Stuyvesant High School asking me if I'd like to teach ninth-grade history. With my immediate future set, I spent the last few weeks of summer preparing for class and looking forward to my first day as a teacher.
It shouldn't have been. In the beginning, things seemed to be just about perfect. My second semester at Stuyvesant was proceeding nicely as I tried to get four classes a day of teenagers to care about the Civil War. Alan's show, despite receiving a withering review from Times critic Frank Rich, was doing well, and looked to be another contender come Tony time. Jack had even managed to find himself a boyfriend, a crackling firebrand of a lawyer named Todd who handled discrimination cases against people with AIDS. They'd met at a holiday party hosted by Hope House, and had been going out ever since. The first indication that the initial happy forecast for the year might have been premature was the death of Luke in the second week of January. Although the AZT had at first seemed to be reversing the progress of the AIDS virus, the effects had been temporary, and finally his immune system had been unable to fight the infections that ravaged his body. Death was attributed to pneumonia, and his insurance company sent Andy a check not long after the sparsely-attended funeral. His paycheck for the seventeen months he spent as Luke's lover was $750,000.
On Valentine's Day, Alan and I celebrated with Jack and Todd at Café Loup, our favorite Village restaurant. Jack, nervous about his first romantic holiday with his new boyfriend, had begged us to double date. Having had few opportunities to get to know Todd, we were only too happy to oblige, if only because it gave us an opportunity to subject him to the Best Friends' Inquisition. He, however, was the one to begin the questioning.
"Five years," Todd said. "That's a lifetime in gay years, especially now."
"I guess it is a pretty long time," I agreed.
"Sometimes it seems a lot longer," said Alan.
"What's that supposed to mean?" I said, feigning indignance.
"See, I told you," Jack said to Todd. "They even act like old married people."
"Hopefully you'll find out what it's like," said Alan, winking at Jack, who blushed. "Jack tells us you work with some of the Hope House clients," I said.
"I work with a lot of the AIDS agencies," Todd said. "GMHC, the People with AIDS Coalition, places like that. AIDS legislation is all brand new, so this is a total gray area as far as the law is concerned. We've got people losing their jobs, their apartments, everything. I'm representing a waiter who was fired because some customers complained they could get AIDS from eating off of plates he carried. It's terrible what's happening."
"It's funny how quickly things change or disappear," I said. "I bet the Village won't look anything like this in twenty years. It will probably be all straights with kids."
"If AIDS keeps spreading like it is, it won't matter," Todd remarked. "There won't be any gay people around to notice."
"I went to the first one in LA last year," Todd said. "It was amazing. They raised something like $650,000."
"I saw a brochure about it at GMHC the other day," I said. "It looks fun. I'm in." "Me, too," added Andy. "I'll hit the cast up for donations."
Three months later, on a sunny May Sunday afternoon that also saw New York hosting the Martin Luther King, Jr. Memorial Parade, two conventions, a bicycle tour, two circuses, a game between the Yankees and the Seattle Mariners, and the final performance of Singin' in the Rain at the Gershwin Theatre, we fulfilled our promises. Gathering with 4,500 others at Lincoln Center, we listened as Mayor Ed Koch welcomed us before we started our walk. Then, en masse, we took to the streets. I hadn't marched for anything since the ill-fated White Night rally eight years before. For the first mile of the walk, I kept waiting for police to come at us with their batons, or for someone to throw a homemade bomb. But when nothing happened, I relaxed and began to enjoy myself.
"You've had everybody," Jack teased.
"Twice," I added.
Andy, his eyes hidden behind sunglasses, scanned the crowd. I couldn't help but wonder if he was looking for his next boyfriend. Where better to find someone with AIDS than at a fund-raiser for its eradication? But he'd donated one-thousand dollars to each of us, so I couldn't be too angry at him. We were halfway through the walk when Alan shook his head.
"What's wrong?" I asked him.
"My vision just got blurry for a second," he said. "It's this sun. It's so bright."
"Are you all right now?"
He nodded. "Yeah, it's gone. I've got a little bit of a headache, though."
I handed him the bottle of water I was carrying. "Drink this," I told him.
That seemed like a good idea, so Alan and I made our way against the stream of walkers until we found an empty bench. We sat down and Alan drank some water.
"Feeling better?" I asked him.
"Feeling stupid," he said. "I didn't need to stop walking."
"It's better than getting heatstroke," I told him.
"You're the one who's almost forty," he said.
"In four years!" I said.
"I'm rounding up," he said, laughing.
We sat for another ten minutes, then walked back to Lincoln Center, where we waited for Alan, Todd, and Andy to return. I thought we would never see them in the sea of people gathered to celebrate the walk's success (it raised over $700,000), but Alan spotted Todd's New York Rangers hat and we flagged them down.
"Are you going to live?" Jack asked Alan when we'd regrouped.
"For now," said Alan. "How was the rest of the walk?"
"That's why we're here," I said as Jack shook his head.
"Is he always like this?" Todd asked me.
"Yes," Jack and I answered in unison while Andy gave us the finger. Two weeks later, during a matinee performance of Song & Dance , Alan collapsed and couldn't get back up. Called by the stage manager, I rushed to St. Vincent's Hospital, where I found Alan sitting up in bed. When I entered, he turned his head toward me, but looked over my shoulder, not at my face.
"What happened?" I asked him.
Again he looked in the direction of my voice, but not quite at me. "I can't see," he said. "What?"
"I'm blind," he said, choking on the last word as he started to cry. I held him, not understanding. I assumed that if his eyes could produce tears, then they must be working. I was sure I'd misunderstood.
"Right now my best guess is CMV," she said. "Cytomegalovirus," she elaborated when neither Alan nor I reacted. "It's a common virus. Most of us have it in our systems at one point or another and our immune systems fight it off with no problems. But in people with compromised immune systems it can cause serious damage, including retinitis."
I heard Alan gasp. When I turned, he was shaking. Tears had begun to run down his cheeks again, and his mouth was open in a silent cry. I took his hand and he gripped my fingers so tightly I almost yelped. I looked at the doctor. "You're sure?" I asked.
Alan had turned his head away from us and was sobbing. I took him in my arms, but he was a rag doll, flopping against me as if the ability to hold himself up had evaporated with the news of his infection. All I could do was hold him as he repeated one word—why—over and over again. I want to say that my thoughts were entirely with Alan at that moment, but they weren't. As he cried and asked why , I couldn't help but wonder how . How had he become infected? We'd been together for more than five years. The chances of his being positive before we met were almost impossible, which meant that he had acquired the virus during our relationship. That meant one of two things: Either I was infected as well, or he had been involved with someone else. Neither option would make the situation better, but at that moment I would have preferred that it be the first one.
"Mr. Brummel, have you been tested?" Dr. Veasey's voice interrupted the storm of my thoughts. "No," I answered, helping Alan settle back into the pillows. "I never have."
"You might want to," she suggested. "We can do that for you if you like."