***Frankie's Atlantic Summer's Day,
Circa 1960-For All Those Who Came Of Age
In The Atlantic Section Of North Adamsville
A little something to set the mood
for this sketch…
A YouTube film clip of the
Capris performing their doo-wop classic, There's A Moon Out Tonight.
This is sent out by request to Elaine from the old neighborhood from Frankie…
Theres A Moon Out Tonight -The
Capris Lyrics
There's a (moon out tonight)
whoa-oh-oh ooh
Let's go strollin'
There's a (girl in my heart)
whoa-oh-oh ooh
Whose heart I've stolen
There's a moon out tonight
(whoa-oh-oh ooh)
Let's go strollin' through the park
(ooh-ooh-ooh-ooh)
There's a (glow in my heart)
whoa-oh-oh ooh
I never felt before
There's a (girl at my side)
whoa-oh-oh ooh
That I adore
There's a glow in my heart I never
felt before (ooh-ooh-ooh-ooh)
Oh darlin'
Where have you been?
I've been longin' for you all my
life
Whoa-uh-oh baby I never felt this
way before
I guess it's because there's a moon
out tonight
There's a (glow in my heart)
whoa-oh-oh ooh
I never felt before
There's a (girl at my side)
whoa-oh-oh ooh
That I adore
There's glow in my heart
I guess it's because
There's a moon out tonight
Moon out tonight
Moon out tonight
Moon out tonight
There's a moon out tonight
From The Pen Of Peter Paul Markin
This is the way my old junior high
school friend, Frankie, Frankie Riley, told me the story one night, so it really is a Frankie story
that I want to tell you about but around the edges it could have been my story,
or could have been your story for that matter:
Frankie walked, walked along the
pavement that morning, that Atlantic early summer morning he insisted that I
tell you about, in long, winter-weight black-pants, long- sleeve brown plaid
flannel-shirt, and thick-soled work boots. 1960s faux beatnik posing attire for him, summer or winter. A not so
subtle fashion statement that Frankie thought made him “cool,” cool at least
for the be-bop, look-at-me-I'm-a-real-gone daddy, bear-baiting of the public
that he relished as he anguished over the job to be done that day, that late
August day. Anguished over his grandmother-ordered mission while he melted in the
late August sun like some Woolworth’s grilled cheese sandwich, as he stood for
a moment almost immobile looking toward the vacant Welcome Young Field in front
of him on the Sagamore Street after he had already traversed Atlantic Street,
Walker Street, and Newbury Street after being dispatched from Grandma’s house
situated on a street off of the far end of East Squantum Street. As he looked
the field over Frankie slowly and methodically pulled out, for about the
eighteenth time, or maybe about the eighteen thousandth time , a now
sweat-soaked, salt-stained, red railroad man’s handkerchief to wipe off the new
wave swear-to-the-high-heavens-inducing sweat that had formed on his brow.
Frankie, after leaving his own house
on Maple Street earlier, had already previously crossed the long-abandoned,
rusty-steeled, wooden-tie worn Old Colony railroad tracks. Those tracks separated
his almost sociologically proverbial well-worn, well-trodden “wrong side of the
tracks” from the rest of Atlantic. (That track, now used as part of the Red
Line subway extension system, still stands guardian to that dividing line.) He
faced, and he knew he faced even that early in the morning, another day in
hell, Frank-ish hell, or so it seemed to him like that was where the day was
heading, no question. Another one of those endless, furnace-blasting,
dirt-kicking, hard-breathing, nerve-fraying, gates of hell, “dogs days,” August
days. Worse, worse for old weather-beaten, world-beaten Frankie, a fiendish,
fierce, frantic, frenzied 1960 teenage August day.
Yeah, it was not just the weather
that bothered him, although that was bad enough for anybody whose metabolism
cried out, and cried out loud and clear, for temperate climates, for low humidities,
or just the cool, sweet hum of an ocean breeze now and again. But also, plain
truth, it was also being a befuddled,
beleaguered, bewildered, benighted, be-jesused kid that gummed up the works as
well. Frankie had that condition bad. Nowadays there are not, mercifully,
double “dog days” like that heat-driven, sweltering, suffocating,
got-to-break-out-or-bust teenage days, not August days anyway.
But, no, now that I think about it,
that’s just not right, not at least if you believe, and you should, all the
information about climate change and the rip-roaring way we, meaning you and
me, and Frankie too, have torn up old Mother Earth without thinking twice about
it. Or even once, if you really look around. Not right either once you see all the
21st century angst-filled Frankies on those heat-swept streets now, except now
the Frankies are buried beneath some techno-gadgetry or other, and are not
worrying about being be-bop, or real gone daddies, or being “beat”, or worrying
about bear-baiting the public or anything like that. But that’s a screed for
another day; at least I want to put it off until then. So Frankie was a
pioneer. But even writing about this day, this Frank-ish day, right now makes
me reach for my own sweaty, dampish handkerchief. Let’s just call that day a
hot, dusty, uncomfortable, and dirty day and leave it at that.
Frankie, by then a finely-tuned,
professional quality sullen and also an award-worthy, very finely-tuned sulky
teenage boy, usually, waited that kind of day out, impatiently, in his
book-strewn, airless, sunless room, or what passed for his room if you didn’t count
his shared room brother’s stuff. The way Frankie told it to me he might have
been beyond waiting impatiently for he was ready, more than ready, for school
to go back into session if for no other reason than, almost automatically come
the “dog days,” to get cooled-out from that blazing, never-ending inferno of a
heat wave that never failed to drain him of any human juices, creative or not.
Nothing, nothing, in this good,
green world, seemingly, could get this black chino-panted, plaid
flannel-shirted, salty sweat-dabbled, humidity-destroyed teenage boy out of his
funk. Or it would, and I think you would have to agree, have to be something
real good, almost a miracle, to break such a devilishly-imposed spell. In any
case, as we catch up to him putting his red handkerchief in his back pocket moving
out on to Sagamore Street, he had left his stuffy old bookcase of a room behind
and he was walking, in defiance of all good, cool, common sense, long-panted,
long-shirted, and long-faced, as was his defiant statement to this wicked old
world in those days, and had begun to cross Welcome Young Field to cut across
to Hancock Street. That is as good a place, the field that is, as any to start describing
this “on a mission” scenic journey.
Come late August this quirky, almost
primitively home-made-like softball field was a ghost-town during the day. The
city provided and funded kids’ recreation programs were over, the balls and
bats, paddles and playground things were now put away for another season,
probably also, like Frankie, just waiting for that first ring of the school
bell come merciful September. The dust that day was thick and unsettled,
forming atomic bomb-like powder puffs in the air at the slightest disturbance,
like when an odd kid or two made a short-cut across the field leaving a trail
of baby atomic bomb blasts behind them.
At that early hour the usually softball
game-time firm white lines of the base paths were broken, hither and yon, to
hell from the previous night's combat, the battle for bragging rights at the
old Red Feather gin mill where many fathers, uncles, and older brothers
tossed down a few to take the heat and the sting of a hard life away. The paths
then awaited some precious manicure from the Parks Department employees, if
those public servants could fight their own lassitude in that heat. And Frankie
thought to himself while they were at it they should put some time, some
serious patchwork time, fixing the ever-sagging, splintered, rotted out wooden
bleachers that served to corral a crowd on a hot summer’s night. He had to laugh
when he thought about the condition of the playing field and about how if the base-path
work was not done, not to worry, the guys who played their damned, loud-noised,
argue, argue loudly, over every play with the ever blind umpire, softball game under
the artificial night lights, if he knew them and he did since his father was a player,
knew the grooves and ridges of the surfaces of the base paths like the backs of
their hands, so nobody needed to fret about them.
This field, this Welcome Young Field,
by the way, was not just any field, but a field overflowing, torrentially
overflowing, with all kinds of August memories, and June and July memories too.
Maybe other months as well but those months come readily to mind, hot, sticky,
sultry summer mind. Need I remind anyone, at least any Atlantic denizen of a
certain age, of the annual Fourth of July celebrations that took place center
stage there as far back as misty memory recalls. The mad, frenetic,
survival-of-the-fittest dashes for ice cream, the crushed-up lines (boys and
girls, separately ) for tonic (a.k.a. soda, with names like Nehi, grape
and orange, and Hires Root Beer for good measure, for those too young to
remember that New England-ism and those brand names), the foot races won by the
swift and sure-footed (Frankie said he almost won one once but “ran out of gas”
just before the finish), the baby-carriage parade, and the much anticipated,
ride on a real, if tired, old pony, and other foolery and frolic as we paid
homage to those who fought, and bled, for the Republic. Maybe, maybe paid
homage that is. A lot of the reason for celebrating part gets mixed up with the
ice cream and tonic. (Remember: that’s soda).
Hell, even that little-used, usually
glass-strewn but for the occasion Parks Department cleaned-up asphalt-floored
tennis court on the corner got a workout as a dance/talent show venue,
jerrybuilt stage platform and all. Every 1960s local American Idol
wanna-be, misty Rosemary Clooney/McGuire Sisters-like 1940s Come On To My
House, Paper Dolls torch singer jumped, literally, on stage to grab
the mike and "fifteen minutes (or less) of fame." Needless to say
every smoky-voiced male crooner who could make that jump got up there as well,
fighting, fighting like a demon for that five dollar first prize, or whatever
the payoff was. Later as it got dark, tunes, misty tunes of course, some of
them already heard from those "rising stars" like some ill-fated
encore, wafted in the night time air from some local band when the Fourth of
July turned to adult desires come sundown after we kids had gorged, completely
gorged, and feverishly exhausted, ourselves. That story, the dark night, stars-are-
out, moony-faced, he looking for she, she looking for he, and the rest of it,
(I don’t have to draw you a diagram, do I?), awaits its own chronicler. I’m
just here to tell Frankie’s story and at shy fourteen that ain’t part of it.
This next thing is part of the
story, though. In this field, this bedlam field, as Frankie recently reminded
me, later, after Fourth Of July celebrations became just kid’s stuff for us,
and kind of lame kid’s stuff at that, we had our first, not so serious crushes
on those glamorous-seeming, fresh-faced, shapely-figured, sweetly-smiling and
icily-remote college girls, or at least older girls, who were employed by the
Parks Department to teach us kids crafts and stuff in the summer programs. And more to the point had our first serious
crushes on the so serious, so very serious, girls, our school classmates no
less, determined to show Frankie, Frankie of all people, up in the
craft-creating (spiffy gimp wrist band-making, pot-holder-for-Ma-making,
copper-etching, etc.) department when everyone knew, or should have known,
Frankie was just letting those girls “win” for his own “evil” designs. And
maybe me, maybe I let them "win" too, although I will plead amnesia
on this one. Now that I think of it I might have tried that ruse on the girls
myself, there was nothing to it then.
But enough of old, old time flights
of fancies. I have to get moving, and moving a little more quickly, if I am
ever going to accomplish “my mission,” or ever get Frankie out of that blessed,
memory-blessed, sanctified, dusty old ball field, sweaty flaming red railroad
man’s handkerchief and all. I‘ll let you know the details of the mission, Frankie's
mission that is, as I go along like I told you I would before but it meant, in
the first place, that Frankie had to go on this “dog day” August day to Norfolk
Downs, or the “Downs” as I heard someone call it once. We always called it just
plain, ordinary, vanilla-tinged, one-horse Norfolk Downs. And Frankie had to
walk the distance.
He, hot as he was and as hot as it
was, was certainly not going to wait for an eternity, or more, for that
never-coming Eastern Mass. bus from Fields Corner to meander up Hancock Street.
Not that Frankie was any stranger to that mode of transportation, to that
walking. Frankie, as I know for certain and have no need to plead amnesia on
this, has worn down many a pair of heel-broken, sole-thinned shoes (and maybe
sneakers too)on the pavements and pathways of this old planet walking out of
some forlorn place (or, for that matter, walking into such places). Just take
my word for that, okay.
You can take my word for this too.
Frankie was now officially (my officially) out of the softball field and
walking, walking slowly as befitted the day, past the now also long gone little
bus shelter hut as you got up on to Hancock Street near the corner of Kendall
Street. You know that old grey, shingled, always needed painting, smelly from
some old wino's bottle or something, beat-up, beat-down thing that was supposed
to protect you against the weathers while you waited for that never-coming
Eastern Mass. bus into Boston. Frankie insisted that his observation of that
hut be put in here despite the fact that he had had no intention of taking the
bus that day as I already told you. He was not even going to step into its
shade for a minute to cool off. But get this. We have to go through this hut
business because, if you can believe this, that lean-to had
"symbolic" meaning. Apparently every time this know-it-all
pseudo-“beatnik,” long pants, heavy shirt and all, had a beef with his mother
(and, you know, let’s not kid each other, when the deal went down, the beef was
ALWAYS with Ma in those pre-“parenting-sharing” days) he sought shelter against
life’s storms there, before caving into whatever non-negotiable demands Ma
insisted on. But enough, already.
Well, if you get, or rather, if back
then if you got on to Hancock Street, down at the far end of the Welcome Young
Field and were heading for Norfolk Downs you had to pass the old high school
just a few blocks up on your journey. Just past the old Merit gas station. That
gas station (now Hess at that location) had been the scene of memories, Frankie
memories and mine too. But those are later high school gas-fumed, oil-drenched,
tire-changed, under-the hood-fixated, car-crazy dreams; looking out at the
(hopefully) starless be-bop ocean night; looking out for the highway of no
return to the same old, same old mean streets of beat town; looking for some
"high white note" heart of Saturday night or, better, the dreams
accumulated from such a night; and, looking, and looking hard, desperately hard
for the cloudless, sun-dried, sun-moaning under the weight of the day,
low-slung blue pink Western-driven be-bop, bop-bop, sun-devouring sky.
Do not be scared (okay, okay,
afraid) of the thought of having to read about approaching the old high school
though, we all did it and most of us survived, I guess. Frankie included. What
made that particular journey on that particular day past the old beige-bricked
building “special” was that Frankie (and I) had, just a couple of months
before, graduated from Atlantic Junior High School (now Atlantic Middle School,
as everyone who wants to show how smart and up-to-date they are keeps telling
me) and so along with the sweat on his brow from the heat a little bit of
anxiety was starting to form in Frankie’s head about being a “little fish in a
big pond” freshman come September as he passed by. Especially, a pseudo-beatnik
“little fish.”
See, Frankie had cultivated a
certain, well, let’s call it "style" over there at Atlantic. That
“style” involved a total disdain for everything, everything except trying to
impress girls with his long-panted, flannel-shirted, work boot-shod, thick
book-carrying knowledge of every arcane fact known to humankind. Like that
really was the way to impress teenage girls, then or now. In any case he was
worried, worried sick at times, that in such a big school his “style” needed
upgrading. Let’s not even get into that story now, or maybe, ever. Like I said
we survived.
Frankie nevertheless pulled himself together enough to
push on until he came to the old medieval times -inspired Sacred Heart Catholic
Church further up Hancock Street, the church he went to, his church (and mine)
in sunnier times. Frankie need not have feared that day as he passed the church
quickly, looking furtively to the other side of the street. Whatever demons
were to be pushed away that day, or in his life, were looking the other way as
well. The boy was on a mission after all, a trusted mission from his
grandmother. Fearing some god, fearing some forgotten confession non-confessed
venial sin like disobeying your parents, was child’s play compared to facing
Grandma’s wrath when things weren’t done, and done right, on the very
infrequent special occasions in his clan’s existence. I knew Frank's
grandmother and I knew, and everyone else did too, that she was a “saint” but
on these matters even god obeyed, or else. This special occasion, by the way,
the reason Frank felt compelled to tell me this story, and to have me write it,
was the family Labor Day picnic to take place down at Treasure Island across
from Wollaston Beach. (That’s what we called it in those days; today it is
named after a fallen Marine, Cady Park, or something like that.) This occasion
required a food order; a special food order, from Kennedy’s.
And there it was as Frank made the
turn from Hancock Street on to Billings Road. You knew Kennedy’s, right? The
one right next to the big A&P grocery store back in those days. As Frankie
turned on Billings, went down a couple of storefronts and entered that store he
had to, literally, walk in through the piled sawdust and occasional peanut
shell husks on the gnarled hardwood floor. At once his senses were attacked by
the smells of freshly- ground coffee, a faint whiff of peanut butter being
ground up, and of strong cheeses aging. He noticed a couple of other customers
ahead of him and that he would have to wait, impatiently.
He had also noticed that the single
employee, a friendly clerk, was weighing a tub of butter for a matronly
housewife, while a young mother, a couple of kids in tow, was trying,
desperately, to keep them away from the cracker barrel and the massive dill
pickle jar. The butter weighed and packaged the matronly women spoke out the
rest of her order; half pound of cheese, thinly sliced, a pound of bologna, not
too thin; a third of a pound of precious ham, very thinly sliced; and, the
thing that made our boy pay attention, a pound of the famous house homemade
potato salad, Kennedy's potato salad.
Frankie winced, hoping that there would
be enough of that manna left so that he could fill his order. That, above all
else, was why he was a man on a mission on that day. Something about the almost
paper thin-sliced, crunchy potatoes, the added vinegar or whatever elixir was
put in the mix that made any picnic for him, whatever other treats might
surface. Hey, I was crazy over it too. Who do you think got Frank "hip"
to the stuff anyway? Not to worry
though, there was plenty left and our boy carried his bundled order
triumphantly out of the door, noticing the bigger crowds going in and out of
the A&P with their plastic sheathed, pre-packaged deli meats, their
tinny-tasting canned goods, their sullen potato salad, probably yesterday’s,
and their expressionless fast exit faces. Obviously they had not been on any
mission, not any special mission anyway, just another shopping trip. No, thank
you, not today to all of that. Today Frankie’s got the real stuff.
“Wait a minute,” I can hear patient
readers, impatiently moaning. This madman of a Frankie story-teller has taken
us, hither and yon, on some seemingly cryptic mission on behalf of an old
friend, under threat or otherwise, through the sweat-drenched heat of summer,
through the really best forgotten miseries of teenage-hood, and through the
timeless dust and grime of vacant ball fields. He has regaled us with talk of
ancient misty Fourth of July celebrations, the sexual longings of male
teenagers, the anxieties of fitting in at a new school, and some off-hand
remarks about religion. And for what, just to give us some twisted Proustian
culinary odyssey about getting a pound of potato salad, famous or not, for
grandmother. Well, yes. But hear me out. You don’t know the end. I swear Frank
said this to me, shaking off the heat of the day on which he told me the story
with a clean white handkerchief from the breast pocket of his light-weight suit
jacket. After that purposeful journey Frankie said the horrible heat of that
day didn’t seem so bad after all. That comment, my friends, made it all worth
the telling.
*************
And this one is sent out by request from Peter Paul to Frankie and speaks to his raging need to get out of the old neighborhood…
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