by Jess Gregg
The Tall Boy
A Memoir
Jess Gregg
New York
For Marijane Meaker
and the bunch at Ashawagh Hall
PART ONE
1
FEBRUARY, 1943
Hollywood Boulevard was crowded, but nobody seemed to be going anywhere. The tourists drifted aimlessly, and so did I, until I noticed that one of them was cruising me. To make certain, I slowed my pace, finally pausing to glance in a shop window. He stopped too, and I could see the reflection of his smile in the plate glass. He was a few years older than I, in his late twenties perhaps, and more solidly built. With his fresh complexion and new sports shirt, he looked like a recently demobilized sailor getting his first gape at Glitter Gulch.
“What’s doin’?” he asked.
“Nothing much,” I told him. “Just heading home.”
There was something lazy in his smile. “Live around here?”
I shook my head. “Live with my folks.”
Lazy, even intimate: “If you got wheels, we could always drive out to the beach—”
The suggestion was not irresistible. At twenty-two, I was choosy, and he wasn’t really my type. However, I was a little tight, he was ready, and, anyway, why not? We strolled down a dark side street to where I was parked, and got into my car. As I turned the key in the ignition, he sprawled back slightly in the seat.
“Oh, man, I’m bustin’ my jeans,” he laughed. The knee he pressed against mine invited me to find out.
I did, and the fact was, he had considerably overstated his condition. Still, I let out the brake, and we pulled away from the curb. At the first boulevard stop, he said curtly, “Turn left!” Surprised at his tone, I glanced at him. He was holding his wallet open to a glint of brass. Whatever else he said was drowned out by the booming realization that I was under arrest.
Stunned, suddenly sober, I followed his directions and drove several blocks deeper into the night. Thoroughly business-like now, he told me to stop in front of a squat, modestly-lit municipal building. Here, we were joined by an unmarked car, which apparently had been following us—decoy cops, like nuns, travel in twos. They went through my pockets, patted their hands under my arms and down my thighs, then searched my car with the same close attention. Nothing incriminating was found, although the glove compartment produced a snapshot of a girl I had dated in college. “Is this a guy in drag?” the second officer asked.
After my car had been impounded and the keys taken, the detective marched me into the station house. A policeman at the front desk greeted him cheerfully. “You pull in another fag?”
“Yep,” said my detective, grinning modestly.
“Guess it takes one to know one,” the desk man teased.
I was left alone in an empty back room. The bleak glare of the fluorescent tubes on the ceiling drained the color from everything but the black fur on the ventilator grill. I paced back and forth, trying to jump-start my brain. What I would say or how I would explain, I had no idea. I had never been arrested before. Nor had I spent much time weighing the cause or consequence of my sexuality—had simply accepted what had been dealt to me, same as I did with being tall, or having no gift for algebra. Since my actions weren’t motivated by malice or greed, they didn’t seem any more criminal to me than the instinct that Sally and Joe celebrate in some lovers’ lane.
This view, however, was not shared by the dumpy plainclothesman who shortly came in. He sat down opposite me and laconically put his questions, while the husky young decoy copied down my replies. I answered straightforwardly, probably following the rule of behavior set since childhood: if you were truthful and cooperative, you would be forgiven.
But childhood was far away now. I was driven downtown to the seedy commercial district, where the white finger of City Hall marked the police headquarters. As I was taken inside, the decoy cop suddenly became chatty, especially about his wife. It was as if he had to make scrupulously clear to me, or even to himself, that he had only been playing a part on Hollywood Boulevard. “No hard feelings,” he added, marching me along a corridor. “It’s just my job.”
Still trying to understand, I asked, “Then who have I harmed?”
Evidently he had been asked this question before, because he didn’t pause to think before answering. “Just that we can’t allow this kind of thing to go on,” he said.
It was all the answer I was to get. In mid-twentieth century America, all questions about this matter had been satisfactorily taken care of by pulling down poor old Oscar Wilde some fifty years earlier. Although a smirk was permissible, nice people didn’t mention homosexuality. Both law and religion regarded it as a kind of willfulness that only tar and feathers could cure. Movies forbad any hint of it, and if novels highlighted the subject, they were likely not to be reviewed or advertised by decent newspapers Regarded as criminal or sick, and with imprisonment always a threat, the gay world was necessarily a secret society, with its own private vocabulary, but no political voice. If one survived in this mine field, it was thanks to guts, intuition, and humor. And luck.
But luck seemed to have run out on me when I was shortly booked on a lewd vagrancy charge, and hurriedly fingerprinted. Too hurriedly, it seems, and by an apparent rookie, for a few minutes later the whole agonizing process had to be done over correctly, each finger pressed in ink and individually rolled from side to side on the printed form. A junkie, waiting in line behind me, asked if this was “my first time in the slam?” Someone told him to shut up, and he dodged involuntarily as if to avoid a fist. A moment later, he was whispering again, advising me not to let them see that I cared. The phrase he used should have made me smile, considering my already conspicuous height. “Walk tall,” he said.
Neither pride nor poise was equal to the storm inside me, however, and in an effort to quiet it, I began blocking out each impression as it happened—a kind of self-hypnosis I had experimented with before in the dentist’s chair. As a result, I have no clear picture of what happened next. I don’t think I was locked in the tank with the drunks and vagrants, nor was I taken into night court; yet my dread of both possibilities left an impression so vivid, it passes today as memory. All I can be sure of is that, some time between midnight and forever, I was handed a yellow phone book and told to choose someone to stand my bail.
There were pages and pages devoted to this service—open all night, most of them read, and some, next door to the jail. Soon I was filling out a bond agreement with a sullen middle-aged man in a too-sharp suit. When I was released, he consented to taxi me to my father’s house for an additional seventy-five dollars. His silent contempt as we sped through the deserted streets, however, was gratis.
When we reached home, I ran inside and scraped together whatever money I could find, some of it in nickels and dimes, and brought this back to the car. The bond man counted it carefully, and then as I turned to go, said, “Wait!” I glanced back. His eyes were still contemptuous, but furtively he ran his hand down the inside of his leg. “How about it?” he asked. I did not reply, but crossed the lawn and let myself back into the house.
No one was awake. Tiptoeing up to my room, I stripped quickly and got into the shower, compulsively scrubbing myself as if the disinfectant smell of jail were still clinging to me. What little perspective remained had to battle an impulse to destroy the clothes I had worn that night. Shirt, slacks, and shorts finally went into the laundry hamper, and my tweed jacket to the back of my closet. As far as I know, I never wore it again.
It was nearly four in the morning, but there was no hope of sleep. Some time in the next twenty-four hours, I was due to face a magistrate, and it was already clear to me that, for the first time in my life, I was entirely on my o
wn. The advice I had always gotten from my father, and the emotional support from my mother, were suddenly out of reach—I had misery enough without causing theirs. Yet costs had already accumulated that I could not take care of alone.
Forcing myself to sit down, I tried to take stock of my resources. I had a Swiss watch I could sell, and a car that I could not—my family would ask questions if it disappeared. In my last year at college, I had begun to sell some of my stories to the magazines, but income from this was modest and only occasional. Living at home, I had been able to save a little money, yet the grand total of my assets fell far short of what I was going to need. Still less encouraging was the list of people I could turn to for help. At most, there were two, and neither would thank me for waking them up before daylight.
Sitting down by the telephone, I tried to relax while waiting for morning to come. A quote I couldn’t identify, maybe from the Bible, maybe Shakespeare, kept echoing through my head: The gods are just, and of our pleasant vices make instruments to scourge us. I couldn’t sleep, and yet sometimes a dream slipped between my eye and reality, a sort of delusive contact lens that simultaneously clarified and obscured who I was, and the mess I was in. Trying to fix the blame for what had happened to me tonight only made things worse, yet there was relief, almost rest, in some of the involuntary visions of myself as I had been: Jess, short for Jesse, named for my grandfather, called “Bud” at home, and “the tall boy” by my teachers at school—
2
BIG PAL
I was shooting up too fast—at eleven, was nearly as tall as my father, and towered over everyone else in my class at school. The trouble was, I didn’t weigh any more than before. During an examination, our family doctor asked if I played with myself. “Most of the time,” I told him. His glance seemed odd, and I explained that there were no other kids in the neighborhood, so naturally I played alone.
He got kind of brisk, and pointed out the difference between playing by myself and with myself. Apparently both were frowned upon, but at least he had an immediate remedy for the solitude: “Get him out in the world,” he advised my mother and father. “Have him meet people, help him make friends, the boy’s growing up lonely and out-of-step.”
It had never occurred to me that I was either one. I had a great dog, a terrier, who practically understood English. And even when he was busy elsewhere, I had books to read—Poe, Dickens, even kid stuff like the Oz books. My life teemed with the activities I imagined or borrowed from the movies. Still, to please my parents, I began acting like someone else, and tried attaching myself to other classmates at school. Touch football and Scout activities soon bored me, however, and my attention kept drifting back to people more my style—Robin Hood, John Barrymore, or Mane Antoinette. It was a select group, and shortly after my twelfth birthday, it was joined by Mazie Janoski.
I met her only once, and wouldn’t have met her at all, except for my mother’s shameless Uncle Ike. He smoked his cigars down too far, and his neckties seemed about to spontaneously combust; but no man could be all bad who owned so many books about the circus. My sister Sharlie thought his stories about the days when he owned a traveling dog-and-pony show were tiresome, but I couldn’t hear them often enough. Which is why, when the Sells-Floto Circus came to Los Angeles that spring, he invited me and not her to go see it happen “from the ground up.”
He drove by for me at six in the morning, and we reached the exposition grounds in time to see men and elephants heaving the gray canvas up against the sky. We had breakfast with the roustabouts, and lunch with the performers, many of whom Uncle Ike knew. I met Irene, Queen of Escape, who climbed ladders of razor-sharp swords in her bare feet; shook hands with Poodles Hanneford, the equestrian clown, and watched him warm up, stumbling on and off horses as if it was all a hilarious mistake. Yet even this lacked that feeling of spotlight-and-drum roll which happened when I saw the fat lady.
She was young, pretty, and for all her vast pink poundage, remarkably light on her feet. To the blare of a three-piece band, she daintily whirled and twirled, crooking out her rouged little finger; did a high kick, and sank down resoundingly in the splits. Fascinated, I dragged Uncle Ike back to the sideshow three times to watch her perform. Even when her act was over, and the crowd passed along to gape at the Armless Wonder, I kept watching her. She was dressed as a child, her pink costume short and beltless, with a butterfly bow perched in her baby curls. Most heavy women sit clumsily, their legs spread apart, as if playing an unseen cello, but this one crossed her ankles like a young lady, demurely fanning herself with a pleat of newspaper. The second time she caught me watching, she smiled and beckoned. For once, no shyness held me back. By stretching up on tiptoe, I could rest my chin on her platform, and she leaned forward in her reinforced chair. “What’s your name, little pal?” she asked.
I began to say Buddy, then changed it to Jess, and it came out Bus.
Somehow she understood and told me she had two names too—her real name, Mazie Janoski, and her billing. She waved at the weathered canvas banner that identified her as Jolly Dolly, the Dancing Fat Girl. “But they already had that painted before I even joined the show,” she explained.
She chatted on in faintly accented speech, from time to time winking reassuringly at Uncle Ike. Once she interrupted herself to ask, “Bet you could eat some cotton candy, Buddy, huh?”
I had a quarter in my pocket, and said, with the gallantry I had learned from Sydney Carton in A Tale of Two Cities, “I’d rather buy some for you.”
She showed her dimples, an improbable galaxy of them. “You be my guest today,” she said, and flagged a white-aproned vendor. “I can’t eat that spun stuff no how,” she added. “Makes me sick, and then I lose weight. I’m already too light for this job.”
I glanced again at her poster, which boasted that she weighed a thousand pounds. She rolled her eyes up and giggled. “Never been more than five hundred,” she confided, “and sometimes only four eighty-five.” She leaned closer, and I could feel the moist warmth she radiated. “Your mama’s worried about your weight, ain’t that so, little pal?” She reached out and smoothed my hair with her pleated fan. “Oh, I’d fatten you up if you was my boy. I’d put the roses in your cheeks.”
Did she really say that? I’m not sure, for by the following day, I had gone over our conversation a hundred times, and with each repetition, changed it for the better. Did she actually ask Uncle Ike to bring me back after the big show and eat dinner with her? I don’t think so. Had I promised to write her a letter? Maybe not, but it was a marvelous idea, and I began composing it in my head almost at once.
Several days passed before it was ready to be set down on paper. I used my father’s best stationery, although not enough was going on in my life to justify three pages. The snapshot I included was to help her remember who I was. Not until the envelope was sealed did I face the fact that I didn’t know where to send it: Circuses don’t wait around like houses do. Nonetheless, I included everything I knew in the address—her real name, her billing, the sideshow, the name of the circus, the city, the state—and, printing Please Forward under all this, left it to the Post Office to earn the three cents I invested in stamps. I did not hold my breath or do anything silly like classmates who had written fan letters to movie stars—after all, this was someone I knew—but I awoke each morning with a thrilling sense that this might be The Day. For a week, it wasn’t. Then the mailman dropped a pink envelope into our door slot. It was postmarked San Francisco, and there was a Mr. in front of my name just as if I were grown up.
Her letter was written with a soft lead pencil, and while this has faded over the years, it is still legible. “Dear Little pal Budy,” it reads. “You dear and most welcome letter this A.M. and was I surprise. Yes I do Rember you and all redy have the picture of you on my mirrer and look at quite offen. My nephew graduate from 8 grade at 15 year old his huby is foot ball. I gave him a gold football for Chrismas present. My Mother gave rest watch he is on the oner row. W
e are prode of him. Dearest pal you mus study hard and make you grades every year so can graduate to. Rember I bet on you & hope you all luck a pal could wish a nother. Well Buddy I gess I have tolde all the new for this time hope to have letter soon again & send a nother snap shot of you if you have one to spear. Love from Big pal Mazie.”
It is a comment on my sixth grade education that I noticed nothing wrong with her spelling. What I did notice was something in myself. I could not quite identify it, but something seemed to fall into place and began to make sense of everything. Whatever it was, I wanted more of it, and immediately wrote to her again. She replied by return mail.
My mother and father were aware of the correspondence, but I did not want to discuss it with them. I found a hiding place for Mazie’s letters in a carved Swiss chair where a large music box mechanism had been positioned. By year’s end, the cavity was full. In re-reading the letters that have survived, I am struck by how alike they are. The same words keep recurring. “Little pal,” “Big pal,” “Study hard,” “Graduate.” Her concern with weight was constant, although the spelling of the word varies from sentence to sentence. (“I am glad you are Getting taul, you have plenty hight now to way 140 pouns and not be Overweght eather.”) Her own health was referred to only once or twice, even when she took sick and was forced to leave the show. The letters from her mother’s home in San Antonio during the ten months of recuperation iterate over and over her yearning to get back to the sideshow, as well as her expectation of our eventual reunion. (“I let you no when I go back to Circus, and when it come west we will meat—” “We will meet—” “We will see each other agen—”)
Sameness made change more visible as it gradually happened. I started signing my letters Jess, sometimes adding my middle initial as my father did. And in an effort to add interest to my letters, I began to enlarge my peek-hole on the world—experimentally went out for track after school, tried out for plays, was campaign manager for a boy who ran for class president. He did not win. “But never mind,” Mazie comforted. “Don’t take it personal.”