June 8 – July 14, 1998.  Emailing Casey. (#185)

From: “Casey Gauthier” <c.gauthier02@txncc.edu>
To: “Gregory Dennison” <gjdennison@jeromeville.edu>
Date: Mon, 08 Jun 1998 22:22 -0500
Subject: hi!

Hi, Greg!  I just wanted to say I found your website.  It’s so cool!  I laughed at the part with your favorite jokes!  I hadn’t heard most of them before!  Then I saw the link to that Dog Crap thing… that’s you too?  You make those stories and pictures?  That’s so creative!

Anyway, I just wanted to say hi!  Write me back if you can!

~Casey


To: “Casey Gauthier” <c.gauthier02@txncc.edu>
From: gjdennison@jeromeville.edu
Subject: Re: hi!

Hello… so how did you find my page exactly?  Honestly, I forgot that the home page and the jokes were still up… I made that two years ago when I was first teaching myself the basics of HTML.  I found a website that had an HTML tutorial, and regular jeromeville.edu accounts can’t host Web sites but math department ones can.  But I’m glad you found Dog Crap and Vince.  That’s my big creative project right now.  I better get back to work… are you in school, and if so, are you on summer break?  Your address looks like a school email.

gjd


From: “Casey Gauthier” <c.gauthier02@txncc.edu>
To: “Gregory Dennison” <gjdennison@jeromeville.edu>
Date: Wed, 10 Jun 1998 21:38 -0500
Subject: Re: hi!

Thanks for writing back!  I found your page because I love watching the Bay City Captains and I was looking for other Captains fans!  I live in Texas now, but I grew up in East Bayside.  We moved here when I was 12.  I should probably tell you a little about myself!  First, I’m a girl.  Casey is more common as a guy’s name, but my parents liked the name for either a boy or a girl, and they had me!  I’m 19, I just finished my first year at Texas North Community College, studying psych.  I’m going to transfer somewhere next year, hopefully, but I haven’t decided for sure where I want to go.  I work part time at a coffee shop.  Where do you go to school?  What classes are you taking?  Any plans for the weekend?  I’ll talk to you soon!  Bye for now!

~Casey


To: “Casey Gauthier” <c.gauthier02@txncc.edu>
From: gjdennison@jeromeville.edu
Subject: Re: hi!

Wow… that’s impressive, staying a Captains fan in the middle of Texas surrounded by Toros fans.  It would drive me crazy.  I can’t stand the Toros.  A few years ago, when the Captains and Toros played each other for the championship, that was when I first started talking to people online, and one of the first people I met was from Texas.  During the game that year, I was nice and didn’t try to be a jerk about it.  After the Captains came from behind and won, I checked my email, and I had one from her bragging about the Toros being ahead at halftime.  I replied, “So how’d that work out for you?”

Good to know you’re a girl… when I got your email, my first thought was who’s this Casey guy?  Anyway, where in Texas are you?  I’m about to graduate from the University of Jeromeville (do you know where that is?  Next to Capital City, about an hour and a half northeast of East Bayside), and I’m doing the teacher training program here next year.  I want to teach high school math.  My degree is in math, and that was always my favorite subject.  I’m 21, almost 22.  Dog Crap and Vince is my creative hobby; you’ve seen that.  I probably spend too much time talking to random people I meet online, but some of them have become real friends.  Looks like I just made another one. :)  I also like bike rides and board games.  My friend Pete recently taught me this new game called Settlers of Catan; have you played that?  My friends and I have been playing that a lot this summer.  I’m also involved with a Christian student group, and I’m a youth group leader at my church.  Do you go to church?  Do you play any sports or just like to watch football?

You saw my picture on my Web site, but what do you look like?  I’m just curious.  I’m not doing anything this weekend, just studying because finals are coming up next week.  What are you up to?

gjd


From: “Casey Gauthier” <c.gauthier02@txncc.edu>
To: “Gregory Dennison” <gjdennison@jeromeville.edu>
Date: Mon, 15 Jun 1998 20:44 -0500
Subject: Re: hi!

Hi!  Guess what… I just got my nose pierced!  Nothing too flashy, just a little stud.  I think it looks so cute!  Do you have any piercings or anything like that?  Let’s see… what do I look like… I’m 5’5”, 130lbs, with dark reddish-brown hair and blue eyes.  I don’t have a scanner, but I think there’s one in the school library I can use so I can scan my picture and send it to you.  I play soccer, I have for as long as I can remember.  I’m a midfielder… I love it!  I’m not playing on an organized team right now.  I tried out for our school team but I didn’t make it.  I didn’t think I was going to.  I was on a recreational team with some friends earlier this year, but we’re not playing right now.  Do you play any sports?  That’s hilarious what you told your friend in Texas!  I would have been rubbing it in so much after she got cocky like that and then the Toros ended up losing!  I had a bet with my friend Jessica on that game, and I won $10!  I’m in Denton, just north of Dallas and Fort Worth.  I like it here, but I also like when we go visit my grandparents in East Bayside every couple years.  It’s nice there.  That’s so cool that you’re a youth group leader!  That always looked fun!  We go to a Baptist church.  I’m not really involved with any groups there.  What’s your church like?  Also, how is this finals week for you?  Why do you get out so much later than we do?  Is it summer school or something?  I’ll talk to you soon!

~Casey


To: “Casey Gauthier” <c.gauthier02@txncc.edu>
From: gjdennison@jeromeville.edu
Subject: Re: hi!

Your nose ring sounds cute :)

I don’t have any piercings.  I’ve never really wanted any.  A lot of people around here do, though.  Jeromeville is a countercultural college town.

I don’t play any sports.  I played tee-ball when I was 6, and all I remember is that I thought it was boring because we didn’t keep score, and the coach made me cry but I don’t remember why.  In high school, a lot of my friends told me I should play football, so I worked out with the football team the summer after freshman year.  I was more of a student than an athlete, so I also read books about football and learned a lot about strategies, positions, rules, the history of football, things like that.  I only lasted one day of practice, but the experience of taking the time to learn about football has given me a greater appreciation for watching the game.  In addition to watching the Captains on TV, I also go to football games at UJ sometimes.  Basketball too.  My brother got all the sports talent in our family.  He has played baseball and basketball all his life.

I go to an Evangelical Covenant church.  I grew up Catholic, but I had a lot of friends freshman year who encouraged me to take my faith more seriously.  I eventually started going to their church, because it seemed more like what I was looking for.

Do you still live with your family?  How many siblings do you have?  I just have the one brother.  He’s younger, he’s 16 and going to be a junior in high school.  My family lives in Plumdale, near Santa Lucia and Gabilan.  That’s about a two and a half hour drive from here.  I usually only go home on school breaks.  Do you have a boyfriend?  Just wondering.

Sorry it took a while for me to write back.  I was busy, but I’m done with finals now.  To answer your question, UJ is on the three-quarter schedule, so we have three terms during the year instead of two.  Winter break comes after the first term, 1/3 of the way through the year, so to make that work we start at the end of September and get out in the middle of June.  You get out earlier than we do, but you probably also go back earlier.  I need to get going.  I’m going with some friends to see the new X-Files movie today.  We watch the show together every week during the season, but the show is off for the summer now.  Do you watch X-Files?  What else do you have planned for the weekend?  I have graduation tomorrow!  Talk to you soon!

gjd


From: “Casey Gauthier” <c.gauthier02@txncc.edu>
To: “Gregory Dennison” <gjdennison@jeromeville.edu>
Date: Sat, 20 Jun 1998 11:06 -0500
Subject: Re: hi!

Your coach made you cry?  And you were just 6 years old?  That sounds like a terrible coach to me!  Yeah, I still live with my mom and dad.  That makes sense with your schedule; thanks for explaining!  And you’re right, we go back in August.  I have an older brother named Chris.  He’s 22 and still lives at home.  I can’t wait to move out, but it’s probably not going to happen unless I move away for school next year.  Maybe I’ll apply to Jeromeville now that I know someone there :-) and you’re pretty close to my grandparents too.  I don’t have a boyfriend… there’s a guy I’m kind of seeing, but it’s not really serious.  What about you?  Do you have someone special?  And if your family isn’t in Jeromeville, do you have roommates?  Congratulations on your graduation!  Is your family coming?  How was the movie?  I don’t know if I’m going to see it.  I don’t really watch the show.  But I’m glad you like it!  It sounds like fun, watching it with a bunch of friends!

~Casey


To: “Casey Gauthier” <c.gauthier02@txncc.edu>
From: gjdennison@jeromeville.edu
Subject: Re: hi!

That would be so much fun if we both ended up in Jeromeville!  Definitely keep me posted!  Will you be visiting your grandparents in East Bayside any time soon?

Graduation was nice… thank you!  Someone warned me that it would be boring, and it kind of was, but it was good getting to be there with my family.  Afterward, there was a catered lunch thing just for the math department, where they presented me with my award.  It’s still a little weird to think that I’m a college graduate now!  The movie was good too.  It connected to the story of the show, but if you haven’t seen the show, you can still kind of follow what’s going on.  You should see it!

I’ll keep you posted too, because I don’t know for sure if I’ll still be in Jeromeville by then.  It depends on where I can get a job after I finish teacher training next year.  Ideally, though, I would like to stay in Jeromeville and work here or somewhere close enough to commute.  I already know people here, and I love my church.  I don’t know if I actually want to teach at Jeromeville High, though.  I’ve heard that a lot of parents at Jeromeville schools can be kind of overbearing.  That makes sense, with so many people around here in academia.  I know I would be intimidated if I had to call one of my old professors and say that his/her kid is failing math.

I have roommates.  Four of us rent a 3-bedroom house; it’s actually half of a duplex.  Last year I shared the big bedroom and attached bathroom with my friend Sean.  The other two roommates moved out, though, so Sean is moving into his own room.  Jed will be moving into Sean’s spot, and Brody will be moving into the other room.  All three guys I know from Jeromeville Christian Fellowship; Sean also went to the church I used to go to, and Jed and Brody go to the church I go to now.  I don’t love sharing a bedroom, but the rent is cheap.

I don’t have a girlfriend.  It seems like pretty much all of the girls I’ve liked don’t feel the same way about me.  Are you into this guy you’re kind of seeing?  What exactly do you mean when you say it isn’t serious… do you want it to be?  He’s lucky, you seem really nice :)

gjd


From: “Casey Gauthier” <c.gauthier02@txncc.edu>
To: “Gregory Dennison” <gjdennison@jeromeville.edu>
Date: Mon, 22 Jun 1998 21:18 -0500
Subject: Re: hi!

Award?  What did you get an award for?  Congratulations!  I’m proud of you!  We might be going to Grandma and Grandpa’s for Christmas.  It would be fun if we could work it out to meet up sometime!  Your house sounds like fun!  I bet you guys have big parties there and stuff.  I never thought about that, what you said about being a teacher in Jeromeville and teaching your professors’ kids… that would be kind of awkward.  The guy I’m seeing, Jason, it’s kind of complicated.  He hasn’t asked me to be exclusive or anything.  But we go out sometimes, and he has his own place so I go over there a lot.  And we recently started sleeping together too, and I stayed the night at his place for the first time last weekend and it was so good!  But I haven’t told very many people because Jason is my brother’s best friend.  My brother has always been protective of me when it comes to my past boyfriends, and he would freak out if he knew his best friend was sleeping with me.  I’m not sure what to do… you’re smart, do you have any advice for me?

~Casey


To: “Casey Gauthier” <c.gauthier02@txncc.edu>
From: gjdennison@jeromeville.edu
Subject: Re: hi!

Wow… that’s quite a story.  I’m not sure how you would tell your brother and your parents about something like that.  I’ve never been through anything like that.  And how were you able to stay the night if you live with your parents and your brother?  Did you sneak out?  Just think this through and don’t do anything you’ll regret.

The award was for having the highest grades in math classes among this year’s math graduates.  I had straight As in all my math classes.  Thank you!

I just got back last night from the Mystery Trip with the kids from church.  Their parents dropped them off Monday morning and picked them up late Tuesday night, and we didn’t tell anyone where we were going.  It was a lot of fun!  First we went to Mt. Lorenzo, to the beach and some of the rides, then we stayed the night in sleeping bags in a church fellowship hall where we know one of the pastors.  On the second day, we did some touristy shopping in Bay City, and went to see the W’s and Five Iron Frenzy.  Do you know them?  I’m tired, I need a nap, I’ll talk to you soon. :)

gjd


From: “Casey Gauthier” <c.gauthier02@txncc.edu>
To: “Gregory Dennison” <gjdennison@jeromeville.edu>
Date: Wed, 24 Jun 1998 22:11 -0500
Subject: Re: hi!

I stay the night with my best friend Jessica sometimes.  We’ve had sleepovers since we were in fifth grade.  So whenever I want to sleep over with a guy, I just tell my parents I’m staying with Jessica, and whenever she wants to sleep over with a guy, she tells her mom she’s with me.  It’s the perfect system!  We’ve been doing this since high school, and we actually do stay with each other often enough that our parents never check. ;-) I really like Jason, I want to keep seeing him, maybe even be his girlfriend, but I know my brother wouldn’t like it.  It’s not really his decision to make, though.  I’m a big girl, and I can make my own decisions!  You’re smart, getting all A’s in your math classes!  I’m impressed!  Your Mystery Trip sounds fun!  I remember going to Mt. Lorenzo Beach once as a kid.  It’s been a long time, but it sounds like fun!  I remember this really cool old carousel; did you ride that?  Hope you got some good rest!

~Casey


To: “Casey Gauthier” <c.gauthier02@txncc.edu>
From: gjdennison@jeromeville.edu
Subject: Re: hi!

I know that carousel, but I didn’t ride it this time.  I got a quick nap yesterday afternoon.  I’m not doing anything today until Bible study tonight, so I might go for a bike ride.  It’s kind of hot, though, so I should do that soon before it gets any hotter.  I’m going to a wedding on Saturday.  Scott and Amelia, I’ve been friends with them for a few years, they’re a year older than me but we all graduated the same year because they took five years to finish.  And I won’t see them much after the wedding, because they’re moving to New York later this summer.  Amelia is starting medical school there in the fall.  This is the first time I’ve been to a wedding as an adult.  I don’t really know what to expect.  What are you doing this weekend?

gjd


From: “Casey Gauthier” <c.gauthier02@txncc.edu>
To: “Gregory Dennison” <gjdennison@jeromeville.edu>
Date: Thu, 02 Jul 1998 19:44 -0500
Subject: Re: hi!

Sorry it took so long to write back!  I’ve had a really rough week.  Jason met someone else and wants to be exclusive with her.  I’m heartbroken.  It’s not really cheating because we were never official, but I really thought we had a connection.  I’ve skipped class a few times and one day I stayed in bed all day.  I’m really a mess, I hope I don’t sound too pathetic right now… I just thought about you the other day and didn’t want you to think I’d forgotten about you!  How was the wedding?  Jessica is going to drag me to a party tomorrow, I hope it’s fun, I need to get out… what are you doing this weekend?

~Casey


To: “Casey Gauthier” <c.gauthier02@txncc.edu>
From: gjdennison@jeromeville.edu
Subject: Re: hi!

Wow, that’s tough… I’m sorry things didn’t work out with Jason.  Kind of messed up on his part, if you ask me.

The wedding was good!  Very nice.  It was at our church with the college pastor speaking.  They had a reception afterward with a lot of dancing.  Scott and Amelia do swing dancing, that’s gotten really popular here lately.  Is it popular where you are too?  Some friends who were also at the wedding talked me into going swing dancing with them the night after the wedding, and I actually enjoyed it.  I didn’t think dancing would ever be a hobby for me, but I’ll probably keep going back, especially if I have friends there.  Have fun at the party!  I’ll talk to you soon!

gjd


From: “Casey Gauthier” <c.gauthier02@txncc.edu>
To: “Gregory Dennison” <gjdennison@jeromeville.edu>
Date: Sun, 12 Jul 1998 21:03  -0500 
Subject: Re: hi!

I’m the worst friend ever, I’ve gotten so bad at writing back!  Sorry!  Well, things have happened since I talked to you… The party last weekend, there was this guy there I didn’t know, and we both had a little too much to drink, and we hooked up in an empty bedroom, I don’t remember exactly what happened that night but we hung out a lot this week and I slept over at his place last night… he’s amazing!  I really feel good about this guy!  What about you?  Do you have a girlfriend yet?  What did you do this weekend?

~Casey


To: “Casey Gauthier” <c.gauthier02@txncc.edu>
From: gjdennison@jeromeville.edu
Subject: Re: hi!

That happened really fast… no one for me yet.  I went swing dancing again on Sunday.  It’s been fun.  I kind of met someone there, a friend of a friend who recognized me, we danced a few times and talked some, but I don’t know if I’m interested in her like that.  Nothing really going on the rest of the week.  Just the usual stuff, youth group and Bible study.  What about you?


(To be continued…)


Readers: Tell me about a friend that you met through a random encounter on the Internet. Are you still friends with this person?

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May 20, 1995. Not my typical Saturday. (#39)

I nervously left Building C and walked to the other side of the South Residential Area.  It was a warm night, but not warm enough to wear shorts, in my opinion. I wore a t-shirt and jeans.  I kept trying to reassure myself that I didn’t have a reason to be so nervous. They invited me, after all; it’s not like they are suddenly going to reject me.  But what if they do? What if they something weird happens and they never talk to me again? What if I embarrass myself in front of these people, who don’t know me as well as my Building C friends do?

I tried to tell myself I was being ridiculous.  Just because I was going to be hanging out with a different group of people did not necessarily mean that something bad was going to happen.

I got to the main entrance of Building K and saw Megan and Tiffany already in the lobby.  I knocked on the door, and Tiffany let me in. “Hi, Greg,” she said. “Come on in.”

Megan turned around and looked at me, smiling.  “Hey, Greg. We’re just waiting for Maria and Ron.  They said they’d be down in a few minutes. You ready?”

“Yeah,” I said, looking around.  Building K looked just like Building C, except the walls were painted a different color, and there were different flyers on the bulletin board.  Megan was one of the resident advisers for Building K. She wore shorts and sandals with a T-shirt, and her short dark blonde hair still had a few traces of green in it.  She had cut her hair short and dyed it a few months earlier, but it looked like she was growing it a little longer again. Her hair had been somewhere between chin and shoulder length when I met her.  Amy, one of the RAs in my building, had introduced me to Megan in the dining hall during fall quarter, and we had gotten to be friends just from seeing each other around and talking. I wanted to get to know her better, and I wanted to know if she had a boyfriend, and if not, if she was interested in shy younger guys like me.

Earlier this year, my friend Brittany, who lived in Texas and met me online in a chat room, had asked me if I had met any girls in college yet.  I mentioned that I kind of had a crush, but it probably would not work out because she was older. “How much older?” Brittany had asked. “If she’s also a student at your school, then you can’t be more than three or four years apart, right?  That’s nothing. You shouldn’t worry about that, unless this Miss Megan is 40 or something like that.” Brittany was probably right. Megan was only older than me by a year and three days, and that isn’t really a significant age difference. However, I was inexperienced enough with dating and relationships and girlfriends that I still felt way too young to be dating a sophomore.  Megan was going to turn 20 in August. That was a grown-up age. She was almost done being a teenager.

“How’s your weekend going?” Megan asked.

“Good.  I’ve mostly just been studying.  Trying to get it out of the way. One more math midterm on Monday, and that’ll be the last midterm until finals.”

“That midterm is gonna be hard,” Tiffany said.  “Greg’ll probably ace it, though.” I smiled.

“You two are in the same math class, right?” Megan asked.

“Yeah,” I explained.  “I don’t think it’s that hard so far.  But it seems like the quarter is going by fast in general.  The first midterm still feels like it wasn’t that long ago.”

“I know!  This quarter is flying by!”

A girl with dark hair and brown eyes, whom I had seen around the dining commons and met a couple times before, emerged from the stairwell into the lobby with a spiky-haired thin guy.  I assumed this guy must be Ron, since I knew Maria was the girl.

“You guys ready?” Megan asked.

“Let’s go,” Ron replied.

The five of us walked out of Building K, along the bike path past Kent Hall and the barns, turning left at the chemistry building, and getting into a line at the large outdoor steps leading to 199 Stone, the largest lecture hall on campus.  The room held around 400 students, and that lecture hall was the only room in Stone Hall. The front of the room was one building story lower with the rows pitched downward as they would be in a theater or stadium, and a door on the right side of the back wall connected to the basement of the chemistry building, which was right next to Stone Hall.  The room number 199 was chosen to be consistent with the numbering of the nearby rooms in the chemistry building.

On weekends, a division of the Associated Students organization called Campus Cinema used 199 Stone as a movie theater, showing movies that had been in theaters a few months earlier but were usually not available to rent on VHS video yet.  (Those are those giant cassette tapes for watching movies at home, before DVDs, Blu-ray discs, and streaming video were invented.) A different movie would show every day, and tickets only cost three dollars.

About an hour ago, I sat down with Megan, Tiffany, and Maria at dinner.  They said that they were going to watch the movie Quiz Show at 199 Stone and invited me along.  I said sure. I needed to get out and do something tonight, and more importantly, this was an opportunity to hang out with Megan.  I had also seen commercials for this movie when it was released last fall, and it looked intriguing. The movie was based on a true story, about a television game show from the 1950s with outcomes that were rigged by the producers.

On the walk to 199 Stone, Maria and Ron were acting very much like a couple, holding hands and kissing a few times.  Does that mean I was Megan’s date? Or Tiffany’s date? Of course not, but I kind of wished I could be Megan’s date. I was walking in the back of our group of five, and I realized at one point that I had been staring at Megan’s butt and legs in front of me for long enough that Tiffany might have noticed.  I looked up, hoping that she hadn’t.

After we bought our tickets, and Ron bought popcorn, the five of us sat down toward the top of the room, in the right section.  The room was filling up, but we were still able to find five seats together; I sat between Megan and Tiffany.

One of my favorite parts of Campus Cinema was that they showed an old cartoon before the main movie, like movie theaters of my parents’ and grandparents’ time would do.  Tonight, it was the Bugs Bunny cartoon where he has a feud with an opera singer, ending with Bugs pretending to be the conductor at the singer’s concert and making him hold a long note until he runs out of breath and the stage collapses.  I had seen that one many times over the years; I grew up on old Warner Bros. and Disney cartoons.

As I watched Quiz Show, I felt like this movie was exposing a dark underbelly of the game show industry.  The producers of the show in the movie entice their returning champion to lose on purpose, because a new contestant is presumed to be more likable to audiences.  In order to keep the new contestant on the show, they provided him with the questions and answers in advance, and the producers manipulated the air conditioning and ventilation around the contestants to make them sweat and experience physical discomfort.

At one point during the movie, Megan crossed her legs, and I could feel her crossed leg inadvertently brush up against mine a few times.  I looked up one of those times. “Sorry,” Megan whispered, and moved her leg away from me. I didn’t want that. I kind of liked her brushing up against me.  But I said nothing. That would be inappropriate, and probably a little creepy. Also, someone would probably find a way to make fun of me for it, just like in 8th grade when Paul Dickinson figured out who I liked and told the whole school.

I hoped that the game shows I enjoyed watching as a child in the 1980s had not been fixed like the one in the movie; that would be disappointing.  I do remember as a child watching an episode of Press Your Luck where one contestant went on a ridiculous winning streak, always stopping the spinner on the best spot on the board and never getting a Whammy.  I suspected that the contestant himself had somehow figured out how to beat the system, but I did not know if the show’s producers were involved. Hopefully the show was not fixed, because after the incident that the movie described, new laws were passed to prohibit fixing of prizes on television shows.  However, television never tells the full story of what is really happening. I would learn years later that the contestant I watched on Press Your Luck had cracked the code on his own.  He was a compulsive gambler and get-rich-quick artist who lost much of his game show money in a robbery and the rest in a bad investment, and he would eventually die alone, broke, and fairly young.

On the way home from the movie, Megan asked, “Are you guys both going home for the summer?”  The question was directed to me and Tiffany; Maria and Ron were walking more slowly, arm in arm and no longer in earshot of us.

“Yeah,” Tiffany said.  “I’m probably not going to be doing anything.  Maybe getting a job.”

“My mom said she has a job for me,” I said.  “Someone she knows works at a bookstore, and they’re looking to hire someone part time.”

“That’ll be good,” Megan said.  “You’re from, where was it? Somewhere near Santa Lucia, right?”

“Yeah.  Plumdale.”

“And you’re from Ashwood?”

“Yes,” Tiffany replied.  I realized that I had known Tiffany since January but had no idea where she was from until this moment.  Ashwood was at the far end of the Valley, about as far away as Plumdale but inland, to the southeast, whereas Plumdale was more due south.

“I’m going to miss all my friends here,” I said.  “I want to get everyone’s address so I can write. Or email, for people who have computers at home.”

“Definitely,” Tiffany said.  “Give me your address before the end of the year.”

“I will.”

“I’ll be here taking summer school,” Megan added, “so I’ll have email.”

“Great.  I’ll write you.”

By this time, we had returned to Building K.  “Thanks for coming with us, Greg,” Megan said.

“Thanks for inviting me!  It was a good movie.”

“I know.  I’ll see you around.  Have a good weekend, OK?”

“I will.”

Megan hugged me, and I smiled.  Tiffany hugged me too. I turned around toward Building C, turning back one last time to wave to my friends from Building K as they entered the building.

 

As I climbed the stairs toward Room 221, I could hear the muffled sound of music playing somewhere else in the building.  It seemed to be coming from directly above, from the third floor on my end of the building. Instead of going to my room, I continued up to the third floor, curious to see what was going on.  I began to hear muffled voices along with the muffled music, as if many people were being loud trying to be heard over the music.

When I was on the landing halfway between the second and third floor, the third floor door opened, and the music and voices became louder.  Gina Stalteri and Karen Francis walked through the door. Karen was giggling and leaning on Gina, having a hard time standing on her own. She was holding a can of Coors Light beer.

“Hey, Greg,” Gina said, noticing me on the landing.  “Come on up.”

“Greg!” Karen shouted, giggling.  “I’ve never been drunk before!” She tried to step forward but staggered to the ground instead.

I continued walking up the stairs toward them and walked into the third floor hallway, my mind still processing what I was seeing.  This appeared to be a party. My first college party. I had never been to an actual party like this, but I had seen parties on TV and in movies, and this looked exactly what I imagined a party to look like.

At each end of each floor, the hallway widened in front of the last room on each side.  The hallways on the second and third floor opened to a balcony at the end of the building, like the balcony on which Taylor Santiago had been sitting when he met my parents, but that was at the opposite end of the building.  A few months ago, someone had hung strings of beads where I was now, over the hallway at the point just past the door to the stairs, so that one had to pass through the beads in order to get to rooms 322 through 325. Brendan Lowe in room 322 had started referring to himself and his neighbors at the end of the third floor as “The Bead People.”  Derek Olvera in room 324 had put a sign on his door proclaiming that “Cool people live here.”

The door to Brendan’s room was open, and the music seemed to be coming from there.  I didn’t recognize the song. Brendan listened to a lot of weird, really dark music that I was never exposed to in Plumdale.  I peeked my head into room 322, where Brendan, his roommate Will, Jenn from the first floor, and two guys I didn’t recognize were sitting, talking, and drinking something from plastic cups.

“Hey, Greg,” Brendan said, pointing to a case of Coors Light in cans.  “You want one?”

“No, thanks,” I said.  I stood in the doorway observing their conversation for a few minutes.  I didn’t understand what they were talking about, so I went back into the hallway and walked around all the people sitting against the wall drinking beer.

Room 324, where cool people supposedly lived, was also open.  Derek, a tall guy with reddish-blonde hair, sat on his bed. He had his arms around a dark-haired girl named Stephanie who lived at the other end of the third floor; I had seen them together a lot lately.  Pat Hart sat on the other bed. The other bed belonged to Jared, the guy who often played Scrabble in the common room, but I did not see Jared at this party.

“Hey, Greg,” Derek said when I walked in.

“Hey,” Stephanie added.  “What’s up?”

“Just looking around,” I said.

“Take a seat if you want,” Derek offered, gesturing toward an empty chair.  I sat. Derek lifted his leg and farted. Pat laughed. Stephanie gave him a disgusted look.  I chuckled.

Karen walked into the room.  “I’m back!” she said. She attempted to sit with Pat on Jared’s bed, but fell over on her side instead.  Pat picked her up and kissed her deeply for quite a long time. When they finished, Karen looked up and announced to the room, “This is the first time I’ve been drunk!”  She had told me this same thing just five minutes earlier. “Nate said he’s bringing more beer,” Karen continued.

“Good!” Stephanie shouted.

“I’m going to go see who else is here,” I said.

“See you around, Greg,” Derek said.  Stephanie waved. Pat and Karen were making out and did not seem to notice that I was leaving.

A voice coming from Brendan’s stereo started singing something like “bow down before the one you serve.”  This was still not the type of music I was most familiar with, but I had heard this song before, unlike the song that was playing before.  I thought this song was by that band Nine Inch Nails. Brendan really liked them, as did Skeeter. I didn’t see Skeeter at this party.

I stood outside of Derek’s room in the wide part of the hallway at the end of the building.  A few people were sitting there on desk chairs taken from nearby bedrooms, and some other people were sitting on the floor.  Mike Adams and his girlfriend Kim, Dan Woodward, Schuyler Jenkins, Tracy Lee, Yu Cheng, and two guys I did not know who did not live here sat talking.  Mike was telling a story loudly, interrupting to laugh every few sentences. Others laughed as well. I missed the beginning of the story, so I wasn’t sure what it was about.  I saw Pat and Gina come through the beads with a case of Budweiser cans, but then I realized it wasn’t Pat because he was busy sucking face with Karen in Derek’s room. This was Nate, Pat’s twin brother who lived in a different building.  “Hey, Greg,” Nate said when he saw me. “You want one?”

“No, thank you.”

Nate went into Brendan’s room to put the beer down, and then into Derek’s room where his brother was.  I felt something brush against my leg; I looked down and saw Schuyler lean her head on my leg, from a position of sitting against the wall.  “Hi,” she said, looking back up at me.

“Hi,” I replied.

“Having fun?”

“I just got here.  I was watching the movie Quiz Show at 199 Stone with some friends from another building.”

“Did you like it?”

“I did.  It’s interesting.”

“Really?  I’ve seen it before.  I thought it was boring.”

“I grew up watching game shows.  It was fascinating to see the dark side of the game show world.”

“I just thought it was dumb.  Not my thing.”

Mike was laughing loudly again at something, and everyone reacted as if he had been the funniest human being alive.  Schuyler took another sip of beer. “I think I’m going to go back downstairs now,” I said.

“No!” Schuyler replied.  “Don’t leave.” She put her arms around my legs, giggling.  I carefully stepped out of her tenuous, drunken grasp.

“This party isn’t my thing.  Just like how the movie isn’t your thing.”

“Are you ok?”

“Yeah.  I’m fine.”

“Come back later if you want.”

“I might.”

Before I walked into the stairwell, I looked at the door to room 321, where Amy, the RA, lived.  On the small bulletin board on her door, she had put a piece of paper telling people where to find her, with a push pin indicating where she was.

Amy is

  • Here.  Come on in!
  • Here, but please knock first.
  • Studying hard.  Please do not disturb.
  • In class.
  • Eating at the DC.
  • At the Help Window.
  • Somewhere else on campus.
  • Off campus.
  • Not in Jeromeville.

The push pin was next to “Not in Jeromeville.”  Amy must have gone home for the weekend, which explains why the Bead People had chosen tonight to throw a party right next to the RA’s room.

I caught a glimpse out of the corner of my eye of Karen emerging from Derek’s room.  “I’ve never been drunk before!” she announced to the people sitting in the hallway. I turned around and walked back down the stairs to the second floor.  It was ten o’clock at night, and quiet hours started at eleven. If this party didn’t shut down in an hour, I would not be getting any sleep that night. I knocked on the door of room 215, where Gurpreet, the other RA, lived.  He did not answer either. I was not surprised; of course the party would happen when there was no one in charge in the building.

I went back to room 221 and sat on my bed, angry.  How did this happen? I knew no one here was 21 years old; who bought the beer?  Did they have fake IDs? Did they have older friends buy it for them? Maybe one of the other people at the party who was not from this building was older.  And what about Karen? She was drunk enough to be staggering, and she was not even a legal adult. She had skipped a year in elementary school and graduated from high school early, and she had just turned 17 a month ago.  In health class in high school, we learned about drugs and alcohol, and everyone kept talking about how kids could get drugs and alcohol anyway even though they were illegal. Where? How? Who were these kids? Everyone seemed to know how to get drugs and alcohol except for me, and it made me angry.  I had no desire to do drugs or drink alcohol, but it made me angry nevertheless because these people had some kind of secret knowledge about how to flout authority that I did not have, and they felt no remorse for doing something illegal and unsafe.

Sometimes I wished I had gotten invited to more parties in high school.  That way, I would know when and where kids were getting drunk, breaking the law, and I could call the police on them and get them in trouble, and justice would be served.  Now I finally had my opportunity, and the people in charge were gone. It was frustrating. What should I do now? Should I call the police? Should I go to the Help Window and tell whichever RA was on duty tonight?  Maybe I should call Megan. She was another authority figure who might be able to do something about this. And that would give me another chance to talk to her.

As I sat on the bed thinking about what to do, I realized that I knew all along what the right decision would be.  I did nothing. I got over it and let it go. If the Bead People and the others who went to that party wanted to make poor choices, that was their life.  No one was hurting me, and a bunch of college freshmen drinking cheap beer and playing loud weird music is not exactly the greatest threat to America’s freedom and well-being.  The police might not even consider it a high enough priority to respond. And these people were my friends. I had come a long way to be at this point in my life where I actually had friends, and I didn’t want to ruin that by being a stickler for the rules.  Following authority is important, but so is friendship.

I didn’t go back upstairs to that party that night.  But I also didn’t report them to any authority figures.  I just sat quietly in my room playing around on the computer.  I played Tetris. I got on IRC chat and looked for girls to talk to.  I played around with this new thing I had gotten recently called Netscape, where I could look at these things called Web sites that had text and pictures to read.  If the text was underlined, I could click on it and a new page would open. The pictures took several seconds to load, but it was still more interesting than the text-based Internet I had been using all year.  That night I kept myself busy looking up Pink Floyd lyrics and album artwork. And I was far enough away from the party that the noise didn’t keep me awake. I never did find out what happened the rest of the night at the party on the third floor.  I don’t know if anyone got in trouble. And it was not my business. I slept just fine that night.