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Monday, July 26, 2010

Ain't Nothin' But a Houseparty

Not long after my bone-headed performance at my buddy Brill’s party, I had the opportunity to throw a party myself.

My parents were going out of town and they took my brother and sister. I don’t remember where they went or why. But because I had a job, I was allowed to stay home. Alone.

Obviously, I was obligated to have a party. It’s just what you do. I believe it’s part of applying for your driver’s license… you have to swear that the first time you get left alone, you’ll have a party.

Now this was right before I graduated high school. We hadn’t even thought of setting up The Barn yet so this was going to be a party in the house… at least partially. I figured we’d be outside most of the time. 

I planned on keeping the “guest list” pretty tight. The last thing I wanted was a big, out-of-control beer blast, full of people I didn’t know and that wouldn’t respect the grounds. There would be me and my main buddies: Brill, Rik, John, and Rob. The kids from the neighborhood were also invited: Margaret, siblings Robin and Scott (aka Big Mo), and Dougie, who was a friend of Scott’s. John also had a couple guys visiting from out of town, so they came too. And there was one more…

Near the end of the school year, Rik, John and I had been playing sandlot tackle football with another group of guys. We thought those guys were assholes, so it was kind of fun beating on them. (I’m sure they thought the same about us.) But there was one guy on their team that wasn’t too bad. He didn’t run his mouth and showed a real deftness in never actually getting hit. I realized it was the quiet kid from my newspaper class. 

We drove him home after a game and got to know him a little bit. He’d only been at our school for his senior year. So we figured, what the hell… we invited him to our little soiree. His name was Bill and he became an integral part of our group from that day forward. (He was a featured player in this post I wrote in April about a great string of pranks that ran from the end of school through the next year.)

So, the big night came and all seemed well. There were probably a dozen people there, all together. We kept the beer iced down in the washtub in our laundry room, which was right off the back door. There were probably 4-5 cases laid in. 

I was mostly concerned about our living room. We just had brand new carpeting installed downstairs, so I was hyper-vigilant about spills. Not that it mattered… Big Mo spilled a beer on the carpet, but immediately got down on his hands and knees to clean it up. It was a funny sight, because Big Mo was 6’6” and a future middle linebacker on the high school football team. But he didn’t want my little 5'9" dad mad at him so he dabbed that beer up quickly. 

Early during the party, I got a phone call from a guy at school… one of the “cool” guys. He heard about the party and asked if he and another guy could come by. It would have been a total coup on my part.  At that time, I’d never mixed socially with my class’s “upper crust.” But being determined to keep things under control, I told him “no.” I hated having to do that because I actually liked those two guys.  But I had to keep the party closed. I wasn’t taking any chances.

I tell you, I felt guilty about that for the next 20 years. Finally, at our 20th high school class reunion, I talked to the guy and apologized profusely, telling him about the burden I’d been carrying.

He said he didn’t even remember the incident. 

Damn. See what a waste of time guilt is?

But for the most part, we kept the party outside. We used to have a big vapor light that would light up the backyard, enough so that we could always play some night hoops. We had the only basketball court with a built-in biological hazard. The basket was up over the garage and just to the left of the garage door, there was a stone wall that was flattened out about 3’ off the ground. Planted on top of the dirt there was a whole crop of cactus. Those little fuckers were wicked. They had big thorns on them, but even worse were the tiny little hair-like pickers that would come off in whatever touched them. We were constantly picking the little pickers off the basketball.

Well, the comic highlight of the evening was when Scott’s friend Dougie (who went about 270 lbs) fell ass-first into the cacti. What a commotion! I remember hearing a huge yell so I came tearing out of the house to find Dougie doing a rain dance in the driveway, with both hands clutching his giant ass. I’d never seen Big Mo laugh so hard in my life. The big fella didn’t laugh at much, but he could barely speak as he tried to tell me what happened. 

It probably took Dougie the rest of the night to pull all those pickers out of his ass. I don’t think he got many offers of help, either.

The other drama came with the appearance of our neighbor Margaret’s father. He came looking for her at the back door. Rik and John went to the back to stall him, while I hustled Margaret out the front door and around the back to her house. She got home OK, but the damage was already done.

Rik and John didn’t really have a chance to diffuse the situation. Neighbor Dad was eyeing all the empty cases of beer stacked along the wall, asking, “You guys having a party?”

The guys were like, “Noooooo.”

Can you send Margaret out?

Um, no, she’s not here. She hasn’t been here all night.”

I don’t think he believed them. At least I got Margaret home before the guys got rid of Daddy.

Anyway, the party went on uneventfully from there. There was no damage, no major drunk scene, and no second-hand mushroom cleanup was necessary. My buddies all stayed the night, I forget where, probably the couches or the floor. I don’t think we had any couches out in The Barn yet.

I do remember John's friend, who was a golfer, whacking golf balls across ours and our neighbor’s yard, trying to hit Margaret’s little brother from 200 yards away.

Also, Billy asked me if he could take a shower. I said "of course" and thought nothing further of it.  Later, someone came downstairs and said, “Did you know Bill’s up in the shower?

I said I did.

Did you know he’s wearing his clothes?

This is when we first realized that Billy was a little bit off.

But we got the place cleaned up and put back in order long before the folks came home later the next day.

The thing is, I had always intended to tell them I had some people over. I was telling them about my time alone and next thing you know, Mom was putting dinner on. Then during dinner, Margaret’s mom showed up at the back door, most eager to tell her all about the big party.

Busted! Yeah, I got in pretty big trouble for that, and mostly because I didn’t tell them about it. I maintain that I was going to but Mrs. Neighbor beat me to it. Oh well, I took my lumps. And Mom and Dad knew about every other party we ever threw there. Hell, they were nose-deep in them.

But it’s funny… the party I got in trouble for was the smallest one we ever had, with the least amount of drama and damage. Well, except to the bathroom.

Mom wanted to know why there were black shoe prints on the walls of the shower. 

She didn’t know Billy yet and that wasn’t the only time he would do the inexplicable.

19 comments:

  1. Still wonder where those black foorprints came from. Billy inexpicably showed up when I needed him, when you had surgery and needed help getting home. He stayed and made sure you had your meds every hour on the hour. And then he was gone. Inexplicably.
    Those were the days, and nights, my friend.

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  2. Hey, there. Ok, I'll try this again. That was a fun read. Wasn't there, of course. But I have my own great memories of partying heavily with Brillhart. Thanks for sharing. Karma Ansara Gardner ;)

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  3. Those neighbors were a pain in the ass, ratted on everything and everyone. Like a kidparty is major news.
    They didn't know where those black footprints came from anyway.

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  4. I'm giggling at the shoe prints on the walls of the shower! Also, as soon as I read about Margaret's parents coming by, I knew that was how you were going to get flat busted, despite your best efforts. Your parents are much more understanding than my mom ever thought of being, that's for damn sure.

    Since you like stories about concerts and good times gone bad, please come to my blog. Maybe you heard about how M.I.A. pissed off New York City? L'Ailee and I were there this weekend!

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  5. Guilt is a bitch, huh? Sounds like a damn fine party, Bluz. You're the shit.

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  6. Mary Ann,
    That was Billy... here and gone.

    I can't blame the neighbors for ratting us out. They probably blamed me for getting their daughter drunk.

    Karma,
    Thanks for visiting! I love writing about the old Monclova crowd, those were great times.

    Lilo,
    Yeah, we got off relatively light, but I still felt bad. The folks were pretty upset with me. But I learned, and they were at every party thereafter.

    Oh, and I saw your MIA post this morning! I'd be pretty pissed if I was all up for a concert and had that happen.

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  7. Cassie,
    The parties got much, much better, once we moved them to The Barn. Not quite so much worrying about breakage out there.

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  8. At the end of senior year, my mom read our high school newspaper, in which I was voted "Best Party Giver." She turned to me, with a quizzical expression, and said, "When did you have parties?" I shrugged (what the hell, high school was nearly over), and said, "Um, every time you and Dad were gone."

    I let them in on that secret sooner than most stories. Funny, I just wrote a blog tonight about the stories we never told our parents, until we were thirty...

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  9. Great recall Tony or did you journal all this at the time? I can't believe my Mom turned you in. I don't remember that.

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  10. Sherry,
    Yeah, that was a bit soon. We tended to wait until the statute of limitations was up and they couldn’t ground us any more because we were out of the house.

    I used to have so much fun when, as a grownup, I’d be sitting with my parents having drinks and one of these stories would come up. It doesn’t seem so bad 15 years after the event.

    (Note, I wrote that comment from work and emailed it home to enter, as is my custom. And in the meantime I read your post. Seems you made many of the same observations as I just did. Hey everybody, check out Sherry's post, from my blogroll.)

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  11. Mags,
    No, I didn’t journal this, but it was a prime story of my youth. I’ve told it a bunch of times, plus I have had access to Rik and John, and you know how it is when we get together… we tell the same stories over and over. And they keep getting better!

    In fact, to hear Rik and John tell it now, your dad had a machete and they held him off with a broomstick, a saucepan and a donut.

    But yeah, your mom was over within a half hour of their getting home. And I got to hear about that for the next 5 years… lol…

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  12. I can't believe you didn't let the cool kids come over! And then I can't believe you brought it up at the reunion! You are truly a badass.

    A nerdy badass.

    But still a badass.

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  13. Mundane,
    He totally remembered, he just didn't want to admit it. Was probably the first time anyone said 'no' to him in his life.

    But still, I felt bad... he was a good guy and was never anything but nice to me.

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  14. God, I still feel guilty for not returning a pair of borrowed sunglasses the last day of school in 6th grade (we moved and I never saw them again). Guilt IS stupid, but I'm the QUEEN of Guilt. I have a scepter and everything! :)

    That is so cool that you can tell your parents about stuff now. My mom and I know a few things each has done in the past, and I don't think either of us want to explore that too thoroughly. :)

    I never did the drinking and partying in high school. Not that I was a saint - I just did different bad things. My drunken days didn't start til my early 20s, and then they roared! :)

    Sounds like it was an awesome party!

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  15. Here's one of my "issues." I grew up as the oldest child of parents who grew up in the farm fields of Iowa. Thus, they were way over-reactive and protective. I was too scared to day anything. By the time my younger brother reached adolescence, they had relaxed and were much more permissive. He had parties all the time. Of course, maybe that's why he's an alcoholic today... hmmm....

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  16. HAHA!!! everytime I read about one of your high school parties... I get jealous that I wasn't there damnit!

    Then I remember I'm only 26 and feel WAY better...

    Heart you fucker!

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  17. I don't think I ever had a single party when my parents went out of town. I have no idea why. I mean, it's not like I wasn't a little hellion.

    My friend Brandi and I used to drink all their liquor, though, and refill the bottles with water and tea. Several years later, they fixed a drink for their friend Carol, who took one sip, made a face and handed it back to my dad. "I think it went bad," she said.

    Then dad made some remark about their extensive liquor collection, to which I piped up and said, "Actually, you have an extensive tea and water collection." If they could have retroactively grounded me, I think they would have.

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  18. Damn.. It sounds like your parents were pretty cool..

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  19. Cristy,
    I was pretty square for most of my high school life… I didn’t even dip my toe into partying until late in my senior year. My buddies had much more experience at that. But when we all came together, I think I tamed them down a little, they loosened me up a little, and we came to an accommodation somewhere in the middle. I’m going to touch on that in my next post.

    Bagger,
    I had that to a degee as well. My folks were never what I would call over-protective, but as far as punishments went, I got it much severely than did my brother and sister (mostly my brother) for doing things far worse than I ever did. I guess I was the beta-tester.

    CB,
    You would have been the Belle of the Ball, CB. And you're talking a lot of smack for a chick that smells of cabbage!

    Heart you too, ya psycho chick!

    Bachelor Girl,
    That was one thing I NEVER did... mess with the parents' liquor cabinet. Dad would KNOW! If there was a half inch less in the bottle, he'd know and I'd get in trouble. If, God-Forbid I tried to put something else in there, he'd know and I'd get KILLED for fouling a whole bottle.

    I never even dreamed of hitting the liquor cabinet.

    I can't believe your folks had liquor that long that they still had booze in the cabinet that saw you invade and then age enough to grow out of grounding.

    Jennifer,
    They are!

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