Chapter Five
"Jack."
Jack looked up as Ruth came into
the dining room, eyeing the papers and canvases scattered across the table.
"What is this?"
"Rose and I were looking at
each other’s art. We’re both artists."
"I see." Ruth picked up
the drawing of Jack’s family and looked at it for a moment, but didn’t seem to
recognize the people in the picture. "Clean this up, please. Rose has gone
out with her boyfriend and won’t be back until dinner."
"I know." Jack started
putting the drawings back into the portfolio. "She introduced us."
Ruth looked at him, wondering why
he sounded so sour. Deciding it didn’t matter, she added, "Pick up the
canvases, too. You can just stack them on the table in the hallway near Rose’s
door."
"Sure." Jack turned to
the canvases, avoiding looking at her. He didn’t want to give her another
excuse to yell at him.
After cleaning up the table, Jack
wandered outside, bored. He had seen some of the neighborhood when Tom Bukater
had brought him home the day before, and had seen more when he had accompanied
the Bukaters to church that morning, but it was still largely unfamiliar to
him. He wondered if he would get into trouble if he went for a walk on the
chilly fall afternoon.
Jack was nearly to the end of the
driveway when he saw a boy close in age to him working in what were probably
rose bushes, now barren and brown in the late fall weather.
Curious, he walked over to him,
noticing that he seemed to be pruning the bushes, carefully selecting which branches
and twigs to remove. Jack stood and watched for a moment before he spoke.
"Hi…you need any help
there?"
"No, no…I have it." The
boy looked up at him, frowning slightly as he tried to figure out who Jack was.
"I…uh…I’m Jack Dawson. I
just came here…moved here…yesterday."
"I’m Fabrizio di Rossi. I’m
the gardener and handyman for the Bukaters." He started to offer Jack his
hand, then saw the amount of dirt clinging to his gardening gloves and thought
better of it. "Are you a cousin of the Bukaters or something?"
"No…my dad and Mr. Bukater
were friends during the war. My parents and sister died recently, so he took me
in."
Fabrizio’s eyes widened.
"Oh…I’m sorry to hear that."
"Thanks." Jack ducked
his head, not wanting anymore pitying looks. "You sure you don’t need any
help there? I don’t have anything else to do."
"Well…" Fabrizio
glanced at Jack’s clothes—jeans and a heavy shirt, not things that would be
ruined by getting them dirty. "I do have an extra pair of gloves…you don’t
want to touch rose bushes without them."
"I know…my mom grew roses at
our house in Chippewa Falls."
"Where’s that?"
Jack sighed, a little aggravated
that no one seemed to know where his hometown was. "It’s in
Wisconsin."
"Oh." Fabrizio handed
Jack the extra pair of gloves. "I don’t have extra pruning shears, but I
do have some scissors…you can go through and remove any dead flowers you
find."
"Okay." Jack took the
scissors and started looking through the bushes. "Di Rossi…is your mom the
housekeeper here?"
Fabrizio nodded. "Yeah.
She’s been here since before I was born."
"Does your dad work here,
too?"
"No…he died in World War II,
before I was born."
"Sorry to hear that."
"I never met him…I’ve only
seen pictures. Mom came here from Italy when the war ended. She says I was born
two weeks after she arrived in America and three days after she got a job
here."
"So…how old are you?"
"Sixteen."
Jack nodded. "I’m fifteen,
just like Rose." He snipped a few dead buds, then asked, "Where do
you go to school? Smithfield?"
Fabrizio laughed. "No, no.
My mom can’t afford to send me there. Only rich kids go to Smithfield. I go to
one of the public schools—John Bartram High School. I’m a junior."
"What’s it like, living in
Philadelphia? I never even visited here before yesterday."
"It’s okay. Most people
aren’t as rich as the Bukaters."
"Most people aren’t rich
where I’m from, either."
"Most people aren’t rich
anywhere." Fabrizio chuckled. "My mom and I aren’t poor, though. The
Bukaters pay her enough to live on, and Mr. Bukater hired me part-time when I
was fifteen, plus I can work as much as I want in the summer." He stopped
for a moment, concentrating on a scraggly-looking bush. "Where do you go
to school?"
"Mr. Bukater says I’ll be
going to Smithfield."
Fabrizio whistled, impressed.
"He must think of you as part of the family…that school’s expensive."
"I went to public school in
Chippewa Falls…it’ll be weird going to private school. Mr. Bukater and Rose
both say it has a good art program, though."
"You like art?"
"Yeah. I like to draw."
"Have you seen Rose’s
paintings?"
"She showed some of them to
me this afternoon. She’s good at painting."
"I don’t know much about
art…but she does paint good pictures." Fabrizio tugged at a loose shrub,
frowning as it came out of the ground easily. "Damn. This one’s dead…it
looks like something chewed on the roots."
"Maybe it was a
gopher," Jack guessed. "Or some of those snails they like to
eat."
Fabrizio made a face. "I
tried those snails once—they’re called escargot. They’re disgusting, but Mrs.
DeWitt-Bukater makes them for all her parties."
"She…uh…she makes them
herself?"
"Mom says that’s the only
thing she cooks."
"Does she catch them
herself, too?"
"I think she buys them from
somewhere."
Jack thought he understood a
little better why she’d been so mad when he wouldn’t eat the snails—when he had
refused to eat something his mother had cooked, she had gotten mad at him,
too—but never so mad that she had yelled at him in front of guests. "I
still don’t want to try them. I wouldn’t eat them last night and she sent me to
my room without dinner."
"Feed them to the dog."
"That’s what Rose said, but
her mother caught me trying to hide them in my napkin."
Fabrizio laughed, then stopped
when he saw the look on Jack’s face. Changing the subject, he asked, "Do
you like sports?"
"Yeah. I was at a football
game when…" He trailed off, not wanting to discuss the accident.
"When what?" Fabrizio
saw Jack’s expression and stopped. "Oh…before you came here?"
"Yeah…uh…there was a car
accident while I was at the game."
Fabrizio shook his head.
"That’s awful…and you lost both of your parents in the accident?"
"And my sister." Jack
looked down, his hand clenching around the scissors. "I’d rather not talk
about it right now, though."
"Sure." Fabrizio tried
to think of something else to say. "Hey…have you ever tried boxing?"
"Boxing?"
"Yeah."
"I’ve seen it on TV…but I’ve
never tried it. I don’t think my parents would have allowed it."
"Me and some of my friends
belong to a youth boxing league. You should try it sometime."
"Maybe I will."
"We almost always practice
on Wednesdays after school…you could come by then."
"Sure. Thanks. It sounds
like fun." They had reached the end of the hedge. Jack handed the scissors
and gloves back to Fabrizio. "I’ll see you on Wednesday, then."
"Cool." Fabrizio
stuffed the gloves in his pocket. "Nice to meet you, Jack."
"You, too, Fabrizio."
It was the beginning of a close
friendship.