racist I guess. I donât doubt that Brian knew that Carlyle is an English name while McNulty is an Irish name, but all these months later and I still canât be bothered to find out if Chen is Korean or Chinese in origin. I know. Iâm a total dick. As I said, Iâm not necessarily proud of it.
Thing is, I liked Brian. I even kissed him once. On the eighth grade trip to Washington, DC, we were in the back of the bus and he rested his head on my shoulder. We werenât good friends or anything, but it was one of those moments. Hot bus. Long drive. All of us tired and woozy.
When no one was looking, I kissed him on the lips. No tongue, but I held it for a couple of seconds. It was more than a peck. I did it because I thought it would feel nice. His lips seemed so soft. And it did feel nice. And soft. But Brian pretended to be asleep, even though it was obvious he was awake. My elbow was touching his chest and I felt his heart speed up. So I also pretended to be asleep, because thatâs what you do when you kiss a guy and he pretends to be asleep. You follow suit, or you end up embarrassing yourself even more.
We went on with our lives after that. Went to the Smithsonian Air and Space Museum, the Washington Monument, the Pentagon. Then we went home. We didnât talk about what I did. Which was fine by me. Brian didnât spread rumors or try to take advantage of the situation. Like I said, one of the nicest guys around. He still smiled at me in the hall, used my name when he saw me.
âGood to see you, Mara.â
âHowâd that bio test turn out, Mara?â
âCan I offer you a baby carrot, Mara?â
Brian liked baby carrots. Loved them, actually. Ate them all the time. Raw. Unadorned. No dip or peanut butter or anything to make them taste less carroty. He kept a bag of them in his backpack and munched his way through life. I donât know if it was an addiction or a discipline, but either way you kind of had to respect it.
What you didnât have to respect was that he wore the same pair of filthy neon-blue sneakers everywhere, even to dances and Katelynâs memorial service. He called them his âlaser loafers,â a term that didnât catch on, as heâd obviously hoped it would. Heâd gone viral once and figured he could harness that magic again. It doesnât work that way, though.
Viral, you ask? The boy went viral? In a manner of speaking, yes. Because Brian Chen was the proud creator of Covington Highâs favorite catchphrase: âWrap it up, short stuff!â
It was dumb luck, really. He had first said it during a group presentation in English class when the five-foot-two-inch Will Duncan kept blabbing on and on about how sad it was that Sylvia Plath âoffed herself by sticking her head in the oven because she was actually pretty hot, in addition to being crazy talented.â
âWrap it up, short stuff!â Brian blurted out to shut his pal up and everybody lost their shit. By the end of the week, âWrap it up, short stuff!â was something we said to long-winded people. Then we started hollering it at my parentsâ deli to the guys who literally wrapped up the sandwiches. Then we started using it as shorthand for âplease use a condom or else youâre gonna end up with a baby or a disease, basically something that will ruin your life.â
I know. Wrap it up, short stuff.
So, yeah, Brian Chen was a nice guy. A carroty guy with soft lips, filthy sneakers, and a catchphrase. Now you know him, and I hope you understand that when I make jokes about him and the other people who were here and gone in an instant, itâs because of a billion things that are wrong with me. But itâs not because they deserve it.
what was wrong with us
H ereâs what happens when a guy blows up during your group therapy session thatâs supposed to make you feel better about people blowing up. The group therapy session is