Her eyes so bright, they sparkle into space
The rabbit in the moon bows before the image that comes to be
Upon the splendor of our HIGH SCHOOL SENTAI, Cherry Jubilee
Ever since I could remember, I had bought this comic, manga, umm…graphic novel? I first laid my eyes upon it at at an import store packed with toys, games, action figures, anime, and a plethora of comic books. Some of them covered by a grey plastic guard that I could only catch a glimpse of that first time. I perused the sections of R’anma ½’, ‘Magic Knight Rayearth’, ‘Cardcaptor Sakura’, and the works of Studio Ghibli. However, SHS burned deep into my retinas due to the girl on the cover of each issue. She had flaming red hair and green eyes that look into your souls and tell you: “yes, I know how you feel, we can do this as a team. Walk with me, and we’ll live the dream.”
Yes, she spoke some of her words in poetic rhyme, like the the ending scenes in sone of Shakespeare’s plays, but Will would have never looked good in a high school jumper and skirt.
From that week, every two weeks I would go back to the shop to pick up the next issue and wished I could read Japanese as the English translation was at least six months behind. The shop owner—who was always there—took note of my budding obsession and offered me a deal on a replica of heart pendant she wore around her neck on the day the Yakuza took some kids hostage, and she used it to deflect the shots they made to her heart.
Oh, to meet someone like that in real life.
I’ve had those dreams: the girl walks down the hall and our eyes lock. It’s like lasers, or beams of heavenly light as Cherry would say, connects us. There I go again, talking about a fictional person like she’s real. I had days where I thought I could break out of my shell and approach someone and maybe get a date…but then I’d start asking them to change their color, maybe wear some contacts and a mid-knee-length uniform…
“Gehn! Snap out of it!”
“I’m here, I’m here.”
“Looks like you were on the other side of the cafeteria.”
I usually sat with a group of non-professional outcasts. In college we would be considered an interesting group and maybe if the world was really like the world in “The Big Bang Theory” then we’d be kings. But for the last two years of high school, we have found ourselves underneath the proverbial castle toilet openings.
“You were looking at Cala, weren’t you?” Simon asked as he shook his head.
“No, no, not at all.”
“Liar” Lucas grunted.
“She’s not on my radar.” I flashed my hands in a “no, no” gesture,
“Could have been at one time,” Mike commented as he swirled around a clump of spaghetti that had been on is fork for over five minutes. I wasn’t sure if he was sick, not hungry or sculpting the perfect Italian work of art with what passed for noodles and meat.
I nodded. “Yep, I know, I screwed that up.”
The others glared at me.
“We would have had one girl sit with us, Gehn, but then you went and said that.”
Cala enrolled midway through the freshman year, and she sat with us for a few weeks. We would talk about inane subjects and then, one day, she pulled a card out of pocket and asked if we knew anything about it,
“A Blue-Eyed White Dragon!” Mike exclaimed as he held his hands in a “please, miss, I want some more” way. Cala handed the card over, and Mike, Simon, and Lucas hovered over it like it was gold.
“If I had this card in my deck!”
Cala turned to him in shock as Lucas has a slight lisp, so she assumed he said something else.
“He doesn’t really want to have that in his dick. He meant in a card deck.
Tragically, I said that just about when the entire lunchroom decided to get deathly quiet. So, Carla’s embarrassed, I’m embarrassed, and the guys continued to ogle a laminated card. She looks at the rest of the cafeteria and then high tails it out the door. I rose up to follow her and at that moment, the guys realized what happened.
“Don’t,” Simon warned.
“Don’t get up,” Mike said as he tried to grab the arm that was still on the table.
“Can I just die now?” Lucas lamented as the noise returned to the room.
I ran out of the room and tried to call out to Cala. When she turned back to me, there was no laser, no love’s blinding light or anything, no, just an expression of total shock and disgust.
“Sorry, Lucas has a slight lisp.”
“You guys are messed up.”
“You’ve been sitting with us for all this time. And no one said anything.”
“You thought I couldn’t understand him. You thought I was just some inferior girl. Oh, and she’s blonde, so even more so.”
“How can I think that when you know so much about how a warp core functions on Federation ship?”
Cala stormed back and her eyes stared like knives deep in my chest and eyes. “If you tell anybody else about that I. Will. Kill. You. Do you hear me!”
“Clear as crystal.”
“Freak!”
Cala stormed off and we never saw her the same again.
“I just wanted to talk to her about it. I mean she looked like she heard something else.
“You should have just stayed at the table and let her calm down and come to us after some time had passed.”
“Where were you with this advice then?” Simon and Mike.
“Well, anything would have been better than Gehn’s plan.
“I said I was going to talk to her.”
“And I could have sworn three out of four us said that wasn’t a good idea.”
“You know, we could go and sit anywhere we want to? It’s not we’re confined to this one spot.”
“I, for one, prefer this spot,” Simon replied and pointed to the table. “It’s out of the way so we can see anyone coming from a mile away. The perfect anti-social sniper spot.”
I looked around and slightly signed. It wasn’t that our school was defined by cliques. Sure, we had out “I’m better than you in my head” group. The “Cheerleader” group, that at times could be friendly, but I think that was part of their position. There were the football players, the basketball players, marching band, the “Chronic”, “Ganja” and “MaryJanes”—surprisingly, pot can bring the races together. The “chess club” players, the “D&D” masters, and then there was the four of us. We never had an official name, but we would welcome anyone into our circle.
“Hey, Weebs!”
None of turned our heads to the person approaching our table. He was the proverbial alpha male. The guys who got the chicks. The guy who had a car before he could drive. The one who’s an expert in everything. His fans called him Al, his enemies called him “sir.” Tragically, I had to call him my older brother.
“Is this your gay mag? Found it in your room.”
Do you have that one sibling that if you stepped, looked, or breathed in the proximity of their room, their stuff, or in their general direction then the yelling never stopped? BUT they could just waltz into your room and help themselves like an all-you-can-eat buffet?
“How manly pages did you read?” I asked as he threw it onto the table.
“I autographed a few,” he replied as I could see several crudely drawn penises on a few pages.
“Your friends must understand yaoi more than you do, Allen.”
“Just a bunch of girl boys.”
“It looks like you enjoyed reading it,” I commented with a slight grin but inside I was livid. This was one of my favorites, as it was always wrapped in plastic with a spine card. It was the one that made me want to write to the creators because the series had just abruptly stopped. It has been over a year and so without an answer I just did what everything else did: made up my own fan fiction and posted it online.
“I should let mom know about it.”
“You do that. And I will tell her exactly what that stain is in the back of her SUV.”
“You’re dead when we get home,” Al whispered and then walked away.
“You’ve been saying that since I was four.”
To see our guardian angel is our desire.
Hot-blooded fury v. endless love
She will never resist a fight to save you or me.
The HIGH SCHOOL SENTAI, Cherry Jubilee!
I usually rode the bus home. It was better than being crammed in the back seat against the bodies of overly large juniors and seniors. As Alan would always have his girlfriend of the week riding shotgun so he would clown car everyone into the back. One time he made a threat to make me ride in the trunk and I’m fairly sure he meant it. It was safer and calmer to take the bus. There were about sixty or so other students acting like a mobile mosh pit at the Lollapalooza but it was tranquil in comparison to my brother’s driving.
The ride would allow me to sit back and sometimes sleep during the twenty-five-minute ride home. There were days I would read, and other times I would work on my own little comic book. All I could draw were stick figures and something that kind of resembles a cat. I preferred to working on the storyline, creating the scene in my head, and writing out how the drawing would look in the hands of someone who had talent. Unfortunately, my mind would envision a scene from SHS with Cherry once again stopping a Godzilla-like dragon from demolishing Osaka by singing him back to sleep for—hopefully four hundred more years. I’d only have to make a change or two and I could pass it off as my own. Perhaps I could have it drawn in 3-D?
Our home was a split-level with five bedrooms, three bathrooms, one garage, and absolutely no space to put anything. We weren’t hoarders but we collected too many things: Dad amassed cases and cases of books. Mom had an infatuation with artwork made from polished rock and heather gems. My younger sister, Kat, had so many Barbies that someone at Mattel had to have been able to afford a yacht by now. Al’s room, which was on the lower sub-floor was stacked with weights and a huge sound system for a guitar. He only knew three chords. My room was like a miniature version of the comic shop I always went to with posters all over my walls and other collectibles lining the top of my dresser. If someone outside of our family ever came into my room, I would have to explain the meaning of a gigantic poster of the character for HSS that WAS once on my wall.
“Allan!” I shrieked as I threw my hands out, trying to remember the way it once hung on the wall. It was now on the floor, with the glass shattered all over the wood floor with pieces lying on the rug. He could try to say it was an accident but the fact that he was in my room earlier on the day, probably while I was on the bus, and that everyone else was gone except for him then it had to have been him. I stormed my way to his room and tried to open it but, it was locked, and Allan wasn’t at home yet. I fumed, I ranted, and I felt like crying. Yes, it was a piece of paper. It was a limited-edition piece of paper encased in a custom frame I begged for almost two years.
I wanted to take revenge, to be the yandere of the house, and to do something to get back at him but I had learned that never worked out. If we were liken to the Brady Bunch, then I was the Jan of the family. It was indeed time to reveal to Mom what had happened in the SUV.
The front door opened. Allan stepped in and tossed his backpack across the the room like we had a corn hole target in the living room.
“You were in my room!”
“Yeah, I was.”
“You broke my poster!” I walked into the front room and stood across the hall from Alan, samurai duel style.
“Are you accusing me of breaking a glorified watercolor drawing that looks like a kindergartener drew it?”
“Yeah!”
“It fell,” Allen said with a shrug. “That annoying gravity thing. We ought to repeal that law.”
Ever had that feeling at running at full tilt, launching yourself into the air and performing a “Hurricane” or “Cyclone Spin Kick” on someone, anyone, or your own brother? Comparing us would be like Andre the Giant vs Kevin Hart. I could out-think my way through an argument but, there was no way I could take Alan in a fight. I tried once and lost my two front upper teeth…fortunately they were just my baby teeth.
Alan stood in front of me with a slight smirk followed by the expression that screamed “come at me, bro”.
“Why?”
“Because you have all this girly stuff. Do you have a stack of panties in the drawer?”
“No, but you have some under your bed. Let me guess, Michelle’s been over?”
“I think her name was…Cala.”
“I highly doubt that.’
“Think what you want.”
“What do they see in you?”
“What they can never see in you.”
I wanted to think that there was someone out there for me. They just didn’t go to my school or maybe they lived off the coast of Tasmania, on the outskirts of Reykjavik, or could be leaning on the wall next to a convenience store in the heart of Akihabara. I did say “they” because as much as I would never admit to Alan—or anyone else for that matter—that I really didn’t care about what sex someone was or however we were supposed to view it. I mean, some planets out there had multi-genders, but we didn’t care about that as much as we wondered if Picard and crew were going to get out of the love triangle mess Riker would get himself into.
Cala was close to the “manic techno holodeck girl” one could come across at the time and I almost revealed my switch-hitter status on life, until that fateful day. Maybe she wouldn’t have ratted me out. Maybe she’d understand my inability to talk about things like that when the other guys talked about their proposed Hollywood dates at the semi-privacy of our backwoods table, but I couldn’t risk it. Alan didn’t have to be a jerk about it but, he was, of course.
“Cala would be able to see straight through that incredibly small brain you have.”
“She wasn’t looking at my brain,” Alan replied with a chuckle.
“Then at your big mouth, that never seems to want to shut up.”
“No, we were in my car, and she was staring so wide at my…Hey, Mom!”
The door opened and Mom walked in with Kat in tow.
“Alan, Gehn, I have groceries in the car. Get them, please.”
“Sure mom. “Glad to help,” Alan replied with an Eddie Haskel-channeling smile.
We walked outside the house, to the SUV in the driveway.
“Hey, Gehn, the guys keep asking me a question.”
Alan opened the rear door.
“About how a neanderthal man like yourself can stand up straight?”
He picked up a heavy bag and shoved it into my chest.
“There’s a rumor going around that you’re gay.”
He then picked up two other bags and, somehow, was able to close the door without dropping or crushing anything.
“Wow, I wonder who thought that one up,” I replied. “I also just have to know what your told them.”
“I agreed with them.”
“Of course you did,” I replied.
“So, the poster on your wall is a fairy picture?”
“I’m failing to understand why you want to propagate such disdain for others who think differently than you.”
“You’re not denying it.”
“The poster WAS of a super-powered heroine who comes to the aid of people under attack.”
“I mean about the gay part.”
“And you’re not denying a fact you don’t give a flip out any girl you’ve dated,”
“I think about them all the time.”
“Until five minutes after you drop them off at their homes.”
“They love it,” he replied as we walked into the house.
“No, they don’t,” I stated as Alan closed the door. He looked at me with the “shut-it” stare.
“They don’t what?” Mom asked.
“Girls don’t like being used by Alan in the back of your car.”
“Used?” Mom asked and her eyes sparked. “Oh my God! Is that what that mass of spots on the back seat are?”
“What spots, Mommie?” Kat asked.
“Gehn’s gay,” Alan yelled
“Gehn’s happy?”
Mom looked at the two of us and then at Kat.
“The two of you better go to your rooms right now before I…” Kill us? Call the police? “Tell your father when he gets home.”
“You are so dead, twink!” Alan yelled. “You’re going to wish to God that you had some fairy magic to bail your ass out of this!”
“Alan!” Mom yelled.
“Bail your ass!” Kat repeated.