Garren McKelvy was his name. He happened to be absent on fourth-grade picture day,
and I remember very little about his appearance, except that he evoked
everything that is tall, dark and handsome.
I'd been patient all year, and my concealed feelings longed for an
outlet. As Valentine's Day neared, I had a brilliant idea. This year,
I'd create my own valentine cards, paying particular attention to the
design and message of Garren's.
Most of the bright, construction-papered creations were warm but
light-hearted and utterly cliché, informing my classmates that they were
the cream of the crop or number one or a great pal. I saved Garren’s
valentine for last. It consisted of two dark-blue hearts lovingly pasted
together. I thought about using pink and red, but that seemed a little
girly for him and too lovey-dovey. I needn't have worried about the
color, though, considering the valentine’s not-so-subtle message, which I
will never live down yet somehow don’t regret. "Dear Garren," it began, "One heart isn't big enough to hold the love I have for you. Happy
Valentine's Day. From Evie."
Mercifully, the holiday fell on a Friday that year, so I didn't have
to face Garren or the other boys in the class for a few days after the
party that afternoon turned sour. Garren's reaction wasn’t what I’d
hoped for, quite. I'd imagined him quietly pocketing the valentine
greeting and finding me on the playground later, where he would reveal
his own, corresponding affections, perhaps with a peck on the cheek or a
confiding note. Instead, while my fellow students and I each sorted
through our individual, decorated bags of obligatory valentines, a crowd
of pint-sized gentlemen formed around Garren's desk. And before I could
even guess at the topic of interest, one of the meanest ones suddenly
cried, "Hey Evie, there's your lover boy!" Then they all laughed and I
stared at my shoelaces, waiting for the bell to ring so I could sprint
home and weep away the weekend.
I say I don't regret what I wrote to Garren, and I mean that. "Better is open rebuke than hidden love," a certain proverb insists,
and I would have to agree. So would Saint Valentine. According to
legend, this imprisoned Roman priest fell in love with his jailer’s
blind daughter and miraculously restored sight to her eyes. When the
romance was discovered, Valentine was sentenced to death. He sent the
girl a farewell note on February 14, the morning of his beheading,
signed, "From your Valentine." When I fear rejection, I can recall this
original Valentine and find comfort in the notion that at least
rejection is better than beheading.
Anyway, I've moved on to greener pastures, as you can see from this picture.
3 comments:
This reminds me of a similar time in my past. Fourth grade for me. I honestly don't remember his name. No regrets either.
Glad to hear you also have no regrets! :-) I'm very relieved that fourth grade is behind me, however.
how sweet!! so pure is young love. so sure that the arrow would find its heart. Thank you so much for sharing!
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