Friday, December 29, 2017

Queer as a Five-Dollar Bill: Chapter 17

In Chapter Sixteen, Wyatt's parents feel the heat for Wyatt's outing Lincoln - a lawsuit from the Mayor for lost business revenue, and the threat of Wyatt's mom losing her job... unless they can bury the story completely. But then, Wyatt's invited to appear on a popular T.V. talk show, one with seven million viewers. His mom is convinced it's their best chance of salvaging the situation -- and getting huge publicity for their struggling B&B. They race to downtown Portland to make it to the T.V. studio in time.

Want to start reading from the beginning? Click here for chapters One and Two.

To read about why I'm serializing my entire YA novel for free on this blog, click here.

Thoughts? Reactions? #queerasafivedollarbill / #qaafdb fan art? Share them as comments here or on social media (facebook, twitter, or instagram.)

Okay community, here's Chapter Seventeen!

* *





* *



Chapter 17
Monday January 19

Ms. Eagle’s Bible Cheat Sheet: Phineas (also Phinehas)
Numbers 25:1-5
The people of Israel were whoring around with the daughters of Moab, and starting to follow their gods, and the LORD told Moses he was pissed off.
Numbers 25:6-9
Phineas, the son of an Israelite priest, saw his countryman Zimri, the prince of a chief house of the Simeonites, getting it on with Cozbi, a high-born Midianitish woman. Phineas got a spear, went into their tent – where the couple was getting busy – and ran them through.
Numbers 25:10-15
God was pleased with Phineas, because he had been zealous for the sake of the LORD. Good things happened for the Israelites after that, because God wasn’t angry with them anymore.

* *

            The announcer’s voice boomed around Wyatt and his parents as they stood just off-stage. “A conservative in the heart of the liberal Pacific Northwest… A thorn in their back-side… Your friend, and mine… And a Great American… Ernest Von Lawson!”
            The studio audience of seventy screamed like they were at the Superbowl as Ernest Von Lawson walked past Wyatt onto the set in a dark blue suit, white shirt, red tie, and green and black cowboy boots that Wyatt would have bet ten bucks had never seen a horse. “Hello, Real America!” Von Lawson waved like a rock star and sat at his desk.
            The show started with a couple of jokes that Von Lawson read off a teleprompter. They went over big. Someone with a clipboard tapped Wyatt on the shoulder. “You’re on in two.”
            Wyatt’s mom straightened his thin black tie, something his dad had from college, and pulled at the sleeves of the gray dress shirt Wyatt had gotten for his Great-Aunt Freida’s funeral last summer, like that was going to make it fit. The whole time, she was reviewing Wyatt’s robot-programming. “Okay, Sweetie. Remember to call him Mister Von Lawson. Be respectful. Get our points in – Tours. Lincoln Heritage. Cozy Rooms. Yummy food. A real taste of the Civil War-Era.”
            His dad soft-punched him in the arm. “Knock ‘em dead, soldier.”
            Soldier?
            He guessed he was. And the battlefield was national T.V.
            Someone pushed Wyatt to start walking. His mom whispered urgently behind him, “Make sure someone says The Lincoln Slept Here B&B in Lincolnville, Oregon, or they won’t be able to find us!”
            Von Lawson wound up his introduction. “He’s one of our youngest guests ever, blogger and ninth grade student at Lincolnville High School in, where else?, Lincolnville, Oregon, please welcome Wyatt Yarrow!”
            There was applause for Wyatt, which he thought was cool, and he followed the line of red tape on the floor out onto the set. He shook Von Lawson’s hand and sat in the black leather armchair nearest the desk. The lights were really bright, and the makeup ‘so you won’t be shiny’ made his face feel tight, but he was pretty pumped up.
            “Wyatt.” Von Lawson leaned forward on his desk, all friendly. Wyatt tried to focus on what Von Lawson was saying and not on the cameras. Which one was on?
            “It seems you’ve decided to try and single-handedly destroy the Republican Party.”
            What?
            “Destroy the memory of the greatest President the United States of America has ever had.” Von Lawson paused, making sure he had everyone’s attention. He had Wyatt’s. “Destroy the proud legacy of Abraham Lincoln.”
            Boos. The crowd was booing him.
            Oh no.            
Von Lawson turned to the audience. “Let me tell you what this young man has done. He started a blog, an innocent enough thing, to do a book report on President Lincoln. Honest Abe. Sounds okay so far, right?” Cautious nods. “Gentlemen in the audience, who here has a best friend? Can I get a show of hands?” Men who looked like truckers and farmers and High School coaches put their arms up. Every guy in the audience had a best friend. So did Von Lawson. With a leer, Von Lawson lowered his hand. “Now tell me, are you having carnal, unnatural, immoral relations with him?”
The studio audience bellowed like a zoo full of furious, injured animals.
            Von Lawson patted the air to get the audience to listen. “Well, Wyatt here, he thinks you probably are!” The people in the front row made faces like Wyatt was a steaming pile of poop. A shot of Wyatt’s school blog was projected on a screen behind Von Lawson’s desk, Wyatt’s blog header shouting ‘QUEER AS A FIVE-DOLLAR BILL’ in ten-inch-high letters.
Von Lawson kept going. “In fact, his blog – paid for with our taxpayer money – says that our sixteenth president was doing the nasty nightly with his best friend, Joshua Fry Speed. His best friend! Have you ever heard something so disgusting?” Hisses and boos. Someone yelled, “Pervert!” One woman crossed herself as a guttural growl travelled through the audience.
            People started shouting and Wyatt struggled to make himself heard. “It’s not your tax money anymore… The school deleted the blog!”
Von Lawson turned on him. “Ahh, but you, with your deviant homosexual agenda, put it up on another site, didn’t you? Queer as a five dollar bill dot com. These images are live from the internet.” Von Lawson signaled over the audience and the image behind them changed to Wyatt’s new blog. It scrolled down both of the posts about Lincoln being gay; the video and the letter. Von Lawson continued, “He even included his so-called ‘proof,’ stealing images from the book about Lincoln’s best friend and posting them illegally!” The website showed those pages, too.
Words flashed at the bottom of the monitor that showed Von Lawson what was being broadcast. Wyatt couldn’t help but read it:
Lincoln. Under. Attack!
“You know, it’s such a crazy idea, that we here at the Von Lawson Report did a national survey.” On the screen, graphics appeared by Von Lawson’s head as he spoke. “And it turns out that two percent of people think Lincoln might have been ‘sweet’ on another guy – as absurd and toxic a lie as that is. But, that survey has a plus or minus error of three percent! Which means that something less than zero percent of people actually believe our President Lincoln, founder of our Republican Party, was a limp-wristed fairy.”
Sitting there, Wyatt knew he had to say something, but Von Lawson wasn’t about to stop… “Even with more than a hundred-and-one percent of people knowing it’s nothing short of historical terrorism, Wyatt and his attack on Lincoln are getting quite a bit of attention. As Lincoln isn’t here to defend himself, it falls to me. To all of us. To stand up…” Here Von Lawson got up and walked around his desk to be right in front of the audience, “and say, repeat it after me, Hell no!
            “Hell, no!” The studio audience roared to its feet.
            Von Lawson relished every shouted syllable. “Lincoln was great!
            “Lincoln was great!” It flashed through Wyatt’s mind that the only thing that kept them from being a mob was that they didn’t have lit torches and pitchforks.
            Von Lawson slashed the air like his arm was a sword and he would have first blood. “Lincoln was STRAIGHT!
            “Lincoln was STRAIGHT!” It was pandemonium, and Wyatt wished he could just disappear.
With a satisfied expression, Von Lawson shook his head from side to side. After a long time, he motioned them to settle down. He got a solemn look on his face. “It’s in moments like this, when we need to ask ourselves… what would Phineas do?”
A roar exploded out of the crowd.
What? What did that even mean?
“What would God ask of us, in the face of this plot to make an idol of their perversion, to flush our country down into the sewers of chaos and madness, to destroy the very foundation of this Christian nation?”
A photo of Wyatt’s family’s B&B appeared on the screen behind them.
Oh no.
Von Lawson gave a sly smile. “Would He want you to visit the place that’s saying that Lincoln had this lethal addiction, spending four years doing terrible things against God’s moral order with his best friend? Well, if you think He would, then you go visit Wyatt’s family’s Bed and Breakfast, amusingly enough called the ‘Lincoln Slept Here Bed and Breakfast.’ Though after hearing what they’re saying went on in that bed, I know I’ve lost my appetite.
 “But here’s an idea for you heathens out there: Why don’t you make a day of it?”
The screen behind Wyatt and Von Lawson started showing photos of the different businesses in Lincolnville, with Photoshopped drag queens and Gay Pride Rainbow flags and shirtless guys holding hands in front of them. Von Lawson said, “How about, after getting your queer history at their Lincoln-Was-A-Sexual-Deviant B and B, you get your homosexual Civil War photo taken at Woo’s Historic Photo Shop? Do some queer shopping on Johnson Street and the Gay ol’ stores on Union Square.”
            The studio audience howled, eating up the pictures and every word. “Hungry yet? Get your homo food at the Lincolnville Pantry, and your how-to-be-queer books at the Lincolnville Public Library. And evidently, you can get your nothing’s-too-sacred-to-be-gay-for-us education at Lincolnville’s very own public High School. You want to know what’s wrong with our country today, Real America? The radicalized and destructive homosexual agenda coming out of Lincolnville, Oregon!”
            The audience cheered.
Wyatt felt pummeled. He was trapped there in the chair by Von Lawson’s desk, cameras on him, and nowhere to hide. He could feel himself sweating through his shirt, and hoped it didn’t show.
Wyatt noticed someone with a clipboard give Von Lawson a thumbs-up, and then the host changed gears. “But the news out of Lincolnville isn’t all bad. Another young man – a Real American! – has courageously stepped forward to respond to these allegations about our beloved 16th President…”
            There was a drumroll, and Von Lawson flung his hand to the side of the stage as a cymbal crashed.
Wyatt whipped his head up in time to see a spotlight hit Jonathon, standing there in jeans and a blazer over a yellow T-shirt. The audience fell silent.
Jonathon’s voice rang out across the stage: “If you think Lincoln was gay, then I’m a proud member of the John Wilkes Booth Appreciation Society!” He took off his jacket so the cameras and everyone could see his T-shirt, with black letters that said that very thing:
            IF YOU THINK LINCOLN WAS GAY
            THEN I’M A PROUD MEMBER OF
            THE JOHN WILKES BOOTH APPRECIATION SOCIETY
Then Jonathon turned around, so they could all read the back:
…AND YOU’RE A BIG FAIRY
The crowd went wild as Wyatt tried to not freak out.
Wyatt watched a red-light-topped camera push in on Von Lawson as the host laughed, “I want one of those!”
“I’ve got one for you!” Jonathon strode across the stage and, from the side of the leather chair next to Wyatt, lifted a small shopping bag. He presented it to Von Lawson, who pulled out a T-shirt of his own. To whistles and huge applause, Von Lawson took off his blazer and pulled the T-shirt on over his shirt and tie.
Time seemed to slow as Von Lawson got back behind his desk and Jonathon sat in the chair to Wyatt’s right. Wyatt could see the two paths ahead:
If he admitted he was gay, no one would ever believe him about Lincoln. The whole thing would disappear again into history.
Or, he could stay on the path he was on. Stay ‘straight,’ and like Martin said, let the story of Abe and Joshua make a difference. In lots of people’s lives… just not his own.
Steeling himself, he spoke as soon as the noise dropped down enough to be heard. “Believing Lincoln was gay doesn’t make you a fairy!”
Jonathon stared accusingly at him. “But you are!”
Wyatt stood his ground. “I’m not. But Lincoln might have been. Not… not a fairy, but, in love with another guy!”
            Jonathon’s come-back was whip-quick. “Where’s the real proof? All you have is stupid letters. They had kids! Lincoln and Mary had this pretty beautiful traditional family – and there’s power in that!”
Wyatt tried to sound confident, “Why can’t intelligent people – intelligent straight people – disagree?”
Von Lawson cut them both off, standing to model his new t-shirt for the cameras, “Well, Wyatt. If you think Lincoln was gay, then I believe that makes me a proud member of the John Wilkes Booth Appreciation Society!”
Hoots and applause.
Von Lawson turned to Jonathon as he sat back down, “I suppose that makes me your first official member?”
“There’s no formal society, yet…” Jonathon said with a shrug. “It’s really more to show just how stupid it is to think that Abraham Lincoln was anything other than a red-blooded, woman-loving, real American!” He looked at Wyatt, then over at Von Lawson. “But, sure. You can be member number one!”
“Then I guess that makes you: President of the society.” Von Lawson said to Jonathon.
Jonathon laughed in surprise. “I guess it does.”
The studio audience loved that and applauded again.
Von Lawson eyed the camera. “See? I told you he was a good kid. Now, as for this awesome – you teenagers still say awesome, don’t you?”
Jonathon nodded.
“As for this awesome shirt,” Von Lawson addressed the people in the first rows. “.. a way to speak back to this shameful attack on all that’s right and honorable about our history, and the answer to What would Phineas wear?, I bet you all want one, too!”
Enthusiastic nods.
Von Lawson stood up and walked around his desk, signaling Jonathon to join him. They stood in front of Wyatt, blocking him, as Von Lawson put an arm around Jonathon’s shoulder. Wyatt considered running off stage, but didn’t want to call any more attention to himself.
His voice all conspiratorial, Von Lawson said to Jonathon, “You have something to tell them, don’t you?”
Jonathon grinned. “There’s a free T-shirt under all their chairs!”
The crowd exploded, like they’d all just won the lottery. Everyone reached down to pull out a shirt and then started putting them on – over dresses, over sweaters, over dress shirts. In a minute the audience was a sea of yellow T-shirts, all shouting their membership in The John Wilkes Booth Appreciation Society.
Von Lawson crowed. “There you have it! Remember Phineas, hold great and straight Lincoln in your heart,” He pounded his own chest, “and we’ll be right back with this…” He clapped Jonathon’s shoulder, “How did you put it? Red-blooded, woman-loving, Real American Teenager!”
The show’s going-to-commercial theme music blasted and the studio audience leapt to their feet, screaming their cheers.
The red on-air lights above the three cameras and the set doors went off and an ear-splitting buzzer sounded. The noise dropped to a dull roar. Wyatt was pushed offstage as makeup people and Von Lawson’s staff hurried on set. Someone yanked Wyatt’s body microphone cord off so hard, it left a red line across his neck. People were jeering, yelling at him.
The producer who had welcomed them and given them free drinks in the green room before rushing them to the set waved as Wyatt’s mom hurried his dad and him past the makeup room. “That will be great ratings! And hey,” she shouted after them down the corridor, “any publicity’s good publicity, right?”
As they passed a different green room then the one they’d been in, Wyatt heard a voice he knew, “When’s the best time to give Von Lawson my demo? I want to make sure he hears it, and it doesn’t just sit there.” Wyatt glanced in and saw it was Coach Rails, talking to another producer. A large-screen monitor was on the wall behind them, showing the set. Von Lawson was getting his face touched up by a makeup person, while someone handed Jonathon a soda.
Against his will, Wyatt’s feet slowed. Mayor Rails was on her cell phone, “He knows how to work a crowd, all right. But this could be an disaster for local businesses…”
Becca was there, too, on the room’s couch, folding a stack of yellow T-shirts and putting them into individual plastic bags, which already filled two large cardboard boxes. She glanced up and caught Wyatt’s eye. She gave him this small smile, like it was all some big game, and not his whole life on the line.
Of course, she’d seen it. His complete humiliation, and Jonathon’s star moment.
And then, Wyatt remembered: Millions of people had seen it.
He ran to catch up with his dad and mom, and they didn’t even stop to put on their jackets as they burst out the door to the parking lot. It was pouring rain.
The door shut behind them and the three of them just stood there, silent in the downpour. Stunned.
* *



* *

Want to know why I'm serializing my entire YA novel for free right here on this blog? Click here.

Ready for Chapter Eighteen? It will be posted on January 5, 2018.

Thoughts? Reactions? #queerasafivedollarbill / #qaafdb fan art? Share them in comments here, or on facebook, twitter, or instagram.

Don't miss a chapter - you can sign up to follow this blog and get emailed every post! Just enter your email at the top of the left column.

Thanks for being part of my community, and for being one of my READERS!

Friday, December 22, 2017

Queer as a Five-Dollar Bill: Chapter 16

In Chapter Fifteen, Wyatt discovered that his outing Lincoln may have cost his teacher his job... and that it happened just as Mr. Guzman was maybe starting to believe him! And Wyatt learned that the school shut down all the student blogs (especially his) to bury the story. Overwhelmed, he cuts out of school and calls Martin, who tells him everything's backed up and still online, on a new website the school doesn't control. And then, Wyatt gets a text from his Mom to get home - she's heard. Everything feels like it's starting to crash down on him...

Want to start reading from the beginning? Click here for chapters One and Two.

To read about why I'm serializing my entire YA novel for free on this blog, click here.

Thoughts? Reactions? #queerasafivedollarbill / #qaafdb fan art? Share them as comments here or on social media (facebook, twitter, or instagram.)

Okay community, here's Chapter Sixteen!


* *

* *

Chapter 16
Monday January 19

            Wyatt found them in the kitchen, hovering over the speakerphone. His mom was in a workday skirt and blouse but her hair was still wet from the shower. There was a half-inch stack of papers that looked like legal stuff in her hand. Wyatt’s dad, in his messy-job overalls, held up a finger for him to be quiet.
            Wyatt’s mom was talking. “First it was two – two! – tickets on my truck, which made no sense, then the library’s letter, and now you’re suing us, too?”
            The speaker crackled with Mayor Rails’ voice. “On behalf of the town. You’re not giving me much choice here. It’s your family spreading this destructive rumor that’s getting completely out of control. I’ve tried to contain it, but as the elected leader of this community, they’ll be coming for my head soon if I don’t act for the common good.”
            “But this is crazy!” Wyatt’s mom attempted a laugh but it didn’t quite work. “It’s just a book report, for Heaven’s sake.”
            Mayor Rails’ voice was knife-edge serious. “Five organizations have dropped out of our parade. Five! Our Grand Marshall just cancelled, and it’s not even nine a.m.! Businesses are screaming at me to fix this, our local economy stinks, what am I supposed to do?”
            Wyatt slunk over to one of the chairs around the table. Sitting there in the center next to two parking tickets signed by Mackenzie’s dad – one for being too far from the curb, and the other for mud on their license plate, which was ridiculous because everyone in Lincolnville had mud on their license plate – was the letter from the library, saying Wyatt owed them all that money. That the library was going to sue them.
            Did they find it? Heart pounding, he leaned forward to check, and saw it was stamped “Second Notice.”
            Oh, crap. The bookcase key Wyatt was still carrying around in his pocket, like a good-luck charm, suddenly burned like it was radioactive.
            His mom checked the papers in her hand. A lawsuit. “So you want us to pay… a thousand dollars a day, for lost tourism revenue?”
            The Mayor scoffed. “If you read it more carefully, you’ll see that the amount is tied to lost revenue. A thousand’s just an estimate, but whatever businesses lose, you’ll be on the hook to make them whole.”
            “She knows we can’t afford any of that.” Wyatt’s dad said quietly.
            “Greg, I’m glad you’re on the line with us.” The Mayor said. “If you can’t pay for the damage you’re causing, then your only choice is to wipe this story off the internet, destroy the radio program files,”
At that Wyatt’s mom shot him a ‘what exactly have you done?’ look.
“…and get Abraham Lincoln’s – and our town’s – good name back.” There was a staticy pause on the Mayor’s end of the line. “Look, Elizabeth, I don’t want to be unreasonable. If you can make this whole thing go away, and have the parade be the success it needs to be, I’ll let you keep your job as my assistant. But if it all crashes and burns, so do you.”
            A dial tone filled the kitchen and they realized the Mayor had hung up on them.
            Wyatt’s mom put her forehead in her hands. His dad’s eyes darted from object to object like he was figuring out what they could save and what they’d have to sell once they were homeless.
            Neither of them looked at Wyatt.
            He knew why. He’d done this. Speaking up. Telling the world about Abe being gay. He’d ruined their lives.
            He stared at his wet feet. It wasn’t ripples. It was a storm at sea, and he needed things to calm down. He was never going to be able to come out to them.

* *

            “It’s the third offer, Gregory. The Von Lawson Report. I think we should do it.” Wyatt’s mom was holding the phone in the kitchen, some producer on hold. The B&B line hadn’t stopped ringing since they got home from returning Joshua Fry Speed: Lincoln’s Most Intimate Friend to the library’s drop box. Wyatt could just imagine Mr. Clifton looking all smug when he found it there after school. At least the entire book was still online, and they couldn’t hide it anymore. But the whole seven-block ride home, Wyatt’s dad and mom were on him to call Martin the minute they got back to take the new blog down.
It was the last thing Wyatt wanted to do.
That call had had to wait because his phone was at home in his mom’s purse. His parents had confiscated it – No more technology for you, young man – as part of the big lecture, about how could they ever trust him again after he hid the library’s we’re-going-to-sue-you letter from them, and lied about being 18 so he could do the radio interview. About how hurt they were that they had to find out he’d broken up with his girlfriend from Mackenzie’s online profile. About how honesty was so important.
            And he’d sat there in the truck’s backseat and couldn’t say anything.
            Then they got home, and the phone calls started. Two news outlets, and now this T.V. show, they wanted his blog up.
            Wyatt’s mom kept trying to sell it to his dad. “It’s a nationally syndicated show. The book’s returned, and we couldn’t buy this kind of publicity. Maybe this is how we get through this – the silver lining. If we can make the B&B support us, then I don’t need to work for Kelly!”
            “Liz, you don’t believe Lincoln was gay any more than I do.” Wyatt’s dad reminded her.
            “If we’re smart, we can spin this!” His mom held her hand over the phone. “Wyatt can take the line that intelligent people can disagree about Lincoln. The main thing is to not pass up this chance. It’s once-in-a-lifetime!”
            Wyatt’s dad twisted the strap of his overalls. Neither of them asked Wyatt what he thought. He just sat there, as they decided his fate.
            “Seven million viewers!” His mom’s eyes were lit up with hope.
Wyatt’s dad asked her, “Are you sure about this?”
            She was. “If we can get to their studio in Portland by seven, Wyatt will have a chance to talk up the B&B, coast-to-coast.”
            His dad said, “We’ll need to coach him with exactly what to say – to not make a big deal of the bed or anything that makes people think about what Lincoln might have done in bed.”
            Wyatt tried to keep his face a mask and not show the flash of pain he felt. Anything gay, you mean.
His mom nodded. “Kelly gets prepped before all of her public speaking engagements. And we’ll have two-and-a-half hours in the car. But we have to go now if we’re going to make it.”
“All right.” His dad agreed. “Tell them we’ll do it.”

* *

Coaching Wyatt took nearly two hours. He was supposed to talk about the tours they did, about Lincoln and how important he was to their town, and he wasn’t allowed to say anything about who he thought Lincoln slept with or loved. And if he could get in how comfortable the rooms were, that would be good, too. And the Civil War-Era dinners.
“And don’t mention the bed at all.” His dad insisted.
Wyatt thought that was crazy. “We’re the ‘Lincoln Slept Here Bed and Breakfast.’ How am I not going to say the word bed?”
“Just say B and B!” His dad changed lanes even though he didn’t need to. “Stress the other stuff.”
His mom agreed, “It’s like the social media updates I do for Kelly. If you want people to like you, or vote for you – or stay at your B&B – you can’t talk about anything bad, or anything that’s going to make people uncomfortable.”
But then you end up with a world that’s all fake.
Instead of arguing, Wyatt just bobble-headed it, and went back to repeating what they wanted to hear.
When they were finally satisfied, his parents started talking about all the things they’d do if the B&B were a success, his mom didn’t have to work for the Mayor, and they had some extra money. Be one of the sponsors for the big summer Civil War battle re-enactments on Asgur’s farm. Go to Hawaii on vacation at Christmas. Put money aside for Wyatt’s college.
They were dreaming, and Wyatt didn’t want to burst their bubble.
One of the photocopies Mr. Guzman had left him turned out to be from a book they had a copy of in the glass bookcase. Wyatt had noticed it when his dad and mom made him get Joshua Fry Speed out of hiding to return it. So he’d grabbed Herndon’s Life of Lincoln for the ride and was flipping through it when he found a poem Lincoln wrote, on page 48:
            For Reuben and Charles have married two girls,
            But Billy has married a boy.
            The girls he had tried on every side,
            But none he could get to agree;
            All was in vain, he went home again,
            And since that he’s married to Natty.”

It turned out ‘Natty’ was a nickname for ‘Nathaniel.’ Abe wrote it as a mean joke when he was in his twenties, but Wyatt thought it was pretty wild that Abe was thinking about this kind of stuff. That he wrote a gay poem, about two guys getting married, back in the 1830s. Something he and Joshua couldn’t do when they met and fell in love.
Maybe I should read this on the T.V. show. He snorted at the thought. Dad and Mom would freak.
He needed to talk to Martin.
His mom’s purse was on the floor between the two front seats, and his cell was in there. They were exiting the freeway and his mom was squinting at her smart phone’s map for shortcuts. His dad was cursing the traffic and the rain, even though it wasn’t much more than a drizzle. They were both busy, and Wyatt went for it.
He pretend-dropped his book on his mom’s purse, and, hand fumbling around, managed to grab his phone. He pulled his knees up. Blocking his phone with the book, he saw he had four new voicemail messages. All from Martin. He couldn’t listen to them, or call him back. He’d have to text him.

                        Wyatt                          6:39 p.m.
                        hey! returned book after all.
on way 2 vonlawson report –
I’ll b on live show 2night!

            Wyatt turned off the sound, pressed send and waited, hoping for a response. Outside the window, downtown Portland was all lit-up buildings and shiny asphalt streets. The funny step-pattern of Big Pink winked by. A city of skyscrapers, full of strangers, caged off from nature. He swallowed against the thought that he’d have to live someplace like it, someday.
Come on, Martin!
            A text flashed silently on his screen.

                        Martin                         6:42 p.m.
                        hey! wondered if u were ok.
                        bad idea 2 go on vlr. stop it if
u can.

Wyatt looked at how intense his dad and mom were about just getting him to the studio on time. There was no way he was getting out of this.

                        Wyatt                          6:43 p.m.
                        can’t.

                        Martin                         6:45 p.m.
                        ok. never told you this, but
                        knowing about von steuben,
                        & lincoln & joshua, it makes
                        a difference. makes it easier.
                        for me. for a lot of us. don’t
                        forget that. speak truth to
                        power. & know

I’m cheering u on.

            His chest felt warm as Wyatt powered down the phone. Truth to power. Maybe Martin was right. Maybe, in the middle of everything his parents wanted him to say, Wyatt could make the argument. Convince some more people. Keep the real story of Abe and Joshua alive. After all, like his mom said, intelligent people could disagree…
            “Take a right here!” His mom ordered.
            His dad protested. “It’s an alley!”
            “I know! But traffic is blocked up ahead, and I can get us through.”
            He had to put the phone back. “How much longer?” Wyatt leaned forward like he was trying to see out the windshield as his dad turned them away from a mass of red brake lights. Wyatt slid his cell back in his mom’s purse without them seeing.
            His mom’s eyes flicked to the dashboard clock. 6:47 p.m. “We’ll get there.”
            His dad’s fingers were tight on the steering wheel as they picked up speed.

* *
* *
Endnotes for Chapter 16


In this chapter, Wyatt comes across the poem Abe wrote in his twenties about two guys marrying each other. As cited, it is from page 48 of Herndon’s Life of Lincoln.

* *

Want to know why I'm serializing my entire YA novel for free right here on this blog? Click here.

Ready for Chapter Seventeen? It will be posted on December 29, 2017.

Thoughts? Reactions? #queerasafivedollarbill / #qaafdb fan art? Share them in comments here, or on facebook, twitter, or instagram.

Don't miss a chapter - you can sign up to follow this blog and get emailed every post! Just enter your email at the top of the left column.

Thanks for being part of my community, and for being one of my READERS!

Monday, December 18, 2017

It's a holiday blog break... But the Chapters of "Queer as a Five-Dollar Bill" will still post on Fridays!

Hi everyone,

In keeping with the wisdom of the Anne Lamott quote about how

"Almost everything will work again if you unplug it for a few minutes, including you." 



I'll be taking a blogging break from now until Monday January 8, 2018.

But even during this break, the story will go on! Look for new chapters of my YA novel, "Queer as a Five-Dollar Bill" every Friday...

Wishing you and yours a great holiday season and looking forward to continuing our work to make things better in 2018!

Lee

Friday, December 15, 2017

Queer as a Five-Dollar Bill: Chapter 15

In Chapter Fourteen, Wyatt talks to Martin, the son of the civil rights lawyer he contacted, and finds out Martin helped spread the word online about Wyatt's blog posts outing Lincoln. And the word spreads, with Wyatt watching the numbers grow past 10,000, and then grow past 42,000... and then the story gets picked up by seven more media outlets.

Want to start reading from the beginning? Click here for chapters One and Two.

To read about why I'm serializing my entire YA novel for free on this blog, click here.

Thoughts? Reactions? #queerasafivedollarbill / #qaafdb fan art? Share them as comments here or on social media (facebook, twitter, or instagram.)

Okay community, here's Chapter Fifteen!


* *



* *

Chapter 15
Monday January 19
           
On the way into History, Wyatt nearly stopped in the doorway. For some reason, Mr. Clifton was sitting at their teacher’s desk, absorbed in paperwork.
Where’s Mr. Guzman?
Wary, Wyatt made his way to his own desk and pulled out his notebook.
            Jonathon was standing over by Mackenzie, talking to her. They caught Wyatt looking at them and Jonathon raised his voice. “So, Mackenzie, you wanna go out sometime? Maybe catch a movie?”
            His ex-girlfriend smiled at the guy who’d tormented Wyatt for the past six years. “Sure. Sounds fun.”
            “Awesome!”
            Pretending to read his notes, Wyatt shut his eyes, trying to ignore the whispers and laughter at his expense. The bell rang, and Wyatt heard Jonathon high-five Charlie on the way back to his seat.
            Mr. Clifton’s chair scraped as he stood up, finally acknowledging they were there. Wyatt raised his head as their town’s librarian spoke. “What you see is self-evident: Mr. Guzman is not here, and I have been assigned to be your substitute.” Murmurs of surprise bounced around the room. Mackenzie whipped around and glared at Wyatt, like it was his fault.
The worst part of it was that he knew it was.
“Consequently, there will be new temporary hours at the library; some early, some late.”
New hours? How temporary is this going to be?
Mr. Clifton laid stacks of flyers on the five front desks and had people pass them back. Wyatt gave it a quick glance and then shoved it in his backpack, passing the stack behind him.
Their new teacher walked towards Wyatt’s desk, “And Mr. Yarrow, before I forget, Principal Jackson asked me to make sure you understand that you are expected after school in detention, starting today, for three weeks.”
            “Oooh!”s of he’s-in-trouble-now swirled the air.
            Wyatt fought the heat in his face.
            Heading back to the front of the classroom, Mr. Clifton continued, “The more observant among you may have noticed that your ill-fated school blogs are no longer on the World Wide Web.” He made a face like it was distasteful to refer to technology. After all, the one computer in the library was practically an antique. “But this does not mean your President Lincoln book reports are no longer due. On the contrary, you will complete them the traditional way and hand in your 3,000 word papers on paper.”
            The class exploded at that, everyone trying to figure out how many pages that was.
            Holding up a book from his desk, Mr. Clifton said, “Once again, Mr. Yarrow, I have your new book on President Lincoln here, which you can pick up at the end of class. Really, we’ve all made enough exceptions for you already.”
            Wyatt stared at the wall, telling himself to keep it together while Mr. Clifton bragged about how he used to be a teacher so he knew all about proper formatting. Wait. He noticed the walls were bare. All those motivational posters Mr. Guzman had put up. Gone.
            One person can’t make a difference.
Grabbing his stuff, Wyatt shot out of his chair for the classroom door. As he raced past, Jonathon sniggered with a hissing noise and whispered loud enough for everyone to hear, ‘fag!’
            “Where do you think you’re going?” Mr. Clifton challenged Wyatt.
            “I’m-gonna-barf!” Wyatt flung the door open and tore into the hallway.
            Mr. Clifton shouted after him. ‘I expect a note from the nurse!”
Panting, Wyatt stopped at his locker. He put his forehead against the cool metal, trying to figure things out. I should have played sick and not come to school at all. If he cut out again, the nurse would never buy it. And it would just give Principal Jackson more ammunition for his ‘serious consequences.’
            Stalling for time, Wyatt spun the combination. When he opened his locker, sitting on top of his bunched-up orange and black Oregon State Beavers sweatshirt was a large yellow envelope. “Where did that come from?”
            Floating fake-breast woman wasn’t going to tell him, so he picked it up.
            There was nothing written on either side, but it was sealed shut. Feeling like he was living in a Bond movie, Wyatt snuck it into his backpack and didn’t open it until he was locked in a bathroom stall.
            No note. Just photocopies. Four thin stapled packets.
            He looked through the first one, past the image of a book cover. A. Lincoln, Speeches and Writings: 1832-1858. On the second page was a highlighted circle around a date. It was a reprint of a letter:
                        Springfield, Illinois, February 13, 1842
            Dear Speed:
            Yours of the 1st…”
It was his letter! The one Wyatt had written about on the blog.
He checked the next packet. Another letter circled with yellow highlighter, from Abraham Lincoln: Complete Works.
            February 13, 1842”
And the third, from Herndon’s Life Of Lincoln, circled in the same neon yellow,
            February 13, 1842”
They were all copies of the letter. The same letter, in three different books.
Who would…? Mr. Guzman! He proved I’m not making it up!
There was one more packet. The cover was The Routledge Dictionary of Modern American Slang and Unconventional English, followed by a copy of the dictionary’s page 607. Highlighted at the bottom was a word with its definition:
            lavender adjective
effiminate, homosexual US, 1929”
What’s that about?
The next page was another book cover, Abraham Lincoln, The Prairie Years – I. Volume 1. By Carl Sandburg. 1926.  And after that, a copy of the book’s page 266. This time a few sentences were highlighted:
‘Their births, the loins and tissues of their fathers and mothers, accident, fate, providence, had given these two men streaks of lavender, spots soft as May violets. “It is out of this that the painful difference between you and the mass of the world springs.” And Lincoln was writing in part a personal confession in telling Speed: “I know what the painful point with you is at all times when you are unhappy; it is an apprehension that you do not love her as you should.”’

An arrow was drawn from “two men” to the circled names ‘Lincoln’ and ‘Speed.’
He knew! The rush of being believed was heady. And Wyatt wasn’t the first person to see that Abe loved Joshua. This guy Sandburg wrote about it – even if it was sort of in code – in 1926! And Mr. Guzman wanted Wyatt to know he knew about it!
But as fast as the rush had come on, it deflated. It didn’t matter anymore if Mr. Guzman believed him – he was gone.
Now, it seemed like it was all for nothing. They’d gotten rid of his blog, along with everyone else’s. The whole idea of Lincoln being gay would probably disappear, again, into history – just like no one cared that some guy hinted at it back in 1926.
He’d have to write a whole new book report – there was no way Mr. Clifton would accept one on Abraham Lincoln maybe being gay. Mr. Clifton and Principal Jackson and Mayor Rails had won.
He had no idea what to do. But he couldn’t go back to that classroom. Jonathon knew about him. Everyone knew. And now Mackenzie was going to start dating Jonathon? Some best friend.
Maybe he could transfer to another school.
He needed to call Martin.
He needed to get out of there.
            Wyatt snuck away and made it to the stream. Fifteen minutes past the ford he dialed.
            “Hey! We hit 68,000 before they pulled the plug.” Martin said before Wyatt could say anything.
            68,000?
            They only had 5,818 people in all of Lincolnville. Wyatt held the phone in the crook of his neck and picked up a big rock, half the size of a basketball. He heaved it into the stream. It splashed huge, making some damn good ripples that traveled the whole twelve feet to the other bank. For a couple of seconds it was all churned up and some water even went backwards, but then the stream kept flowing and the ripples faded out. Almost all of them, except he could see his rock, just under the surface, still creating little white-water eddies of current around it.
            The splash had gotten him, too. His jeans from the knees down, and his sneakers, were soaked.
            “Wyatt?” Martin’s voice on the phone.
            “Yeah.”
            “It sounded like you jumped in a pool or something.”
            With the blog gone, Wyatt thought maybe his life could get back to normal now. Like none of it had happened. Do his three weeks of detention, and then go back to no one knowing about him. Let it all die down, and try to get over Mackenzie betraying him. He swallowed hard. “At least it’s over.”
            “Over?” Martin scoffed. “They don’t own the internet. I told you I cloned the site, right?”
            “What’s that mean?” Wyatt asked.
            Martin couldn’t seem to get the words out fast enough, “It means Lincoln’s still out, and all your posts are up, just at a different url: QueerAsAFiveDollarBill.com. I’ve been re-linking to it all morning. I left comments disabled, like on your school blog, because we don’t want to get hit with a wave of stupid. We’re already up to 13,000 page loads! And if I can get the two aggregators that picked us up to re-direct their traffic, we’ll be golden. It’s our, your, First Amendment Right of Free Speech in action. The fact that your school tried to kill it is a story itself, and I submitted that to six more aggregators, plus the two that carried us in the first place. We’ll be blowing up again by this afternoon at the latest. You should feel great!”
            Wyatt didn’t feel great. He thought about Mr. Guzman. What happened to him? Had Wyatt gotten him fired?
            His phone buzzed with a text coming through.

                        Mom                           8:23 a.m.
                        Where are you? School called.
                        Get home now!

            ‘Get home?’ Not ‘get back to school?’ He was in so much trouble.
            Should I tell Dad and Mom about me? They’re probably going to hear it from someone at school. But, if I come out, what if they don’t… What if they stop loving me? What if they suddenly hate me, just for being me?
            The familiar dread felt like someone trying to hold him underwater, and Wyatt had to thrash to the surface of his fear just to breathe.
            “Hey, did I lose you?” Martin asked.
            Wyatt’s voice came out a squeak, “I gotta go.” He pressed ‘end call’ and headed for home, socks squishing every step.
Ripples, it turned out, could get you soaked.


* *



* *



Endnotes for Chapter 15
Just as my fictional character Mr. Guzman reveals to Wyatt, that exact same February 13, 1842 letter from Abe to Joshua (the one Wyatt annotates on his blog) is found in numerous other historical sources, including: pages 79-80 of A. Lincoln, Speeches and Writings: 1832-1858, compilation and notes by Don E. Fehrenbacher, Literary Classics of the United States, Inc. New York, 1989; pages 56-57 of Abraham Lincoln, Complete WorksComprising his Speeches, Letters, State Papers, and Miscellaneous Writings, Edited by John G. Nicolay and John Hay, Volume One, The Century Company, New York, 1894; and the letter is excerpted on page 175 of Herndon’s Life of Lincoln: The History and Personal Recollections of Abraham Lincoln, as originally written by William H. Herndon and Jesse W. Weik, Albert & Charles Boni, New York, 1930. The old slang definition of “lavender” is from page 607 of The Routledge Dictionary of Modern American Slang, Edited by Tom Dalzell, Routledge, 2008. And the quote about Abe and Joshua having “streaks of lavender, spots soft as May violets” is from page 266 of Abraham Lincoln, The Prairie Years – I. Volume I by Carl Sandburg, Charles Scribner’s Sons, New York, 1945.


* *

Want to know why I'm serializing my entire YA novel for free right here on this blog? Click here

Ready for Chapter Sixteen? Click here

Thoughts? Reactions? #queerasafivedollarbill / #qaafdb fan art? Share them in comments here, or on facebook, twitter, or instagram. 

Don't miss a chapter - you can sign up to follow this blog and get emailed every post! Just enter your email at the top of the left column. 

Thanks for being part of my community, and for being one of my READERS!