[Peter continues to provide examples of “small adjustments that I had to make, primarily for structural reasons.”]
For another example, I included in that scene a boy named Raskolnikov, whom I have for years considered my best friend, though I knew him for only two days, at about the time of the events in “Do Clams Bite?” One day, when I was visiting my big grandparents, I walked to the food market in the center of town to get a few things for Grandmother, so that she could make some of the coconut candies that I loved so much. On the way, I met a haunted-looking, hunted-looking boy carrying a sack. We struck up a conversation, and I learned that he was running away from home because his father and mother simply couldn’t get along. His father was an impractical dreamer, who had once wanted to build a lighthouse beside their tract home, and his mother was a beleaguered drudge, who did all the work around the house, struggled to make ends meet, and often screamed at his father, “Grow up!”
As I walked along beside the boy, the possibility occurred to me that he and I might become friends. For a wild moment, I thought of running away with him. Then I thought better of it and tried instead to persuade him to stay in Babbington. I thought that if I took him home my parents would give him some clean clothes and a warm meal and adopt him. He would have none of that. He’d already become a wanderer; he had to keep moving on. He asked me to steal him some fruit and a knife while I was in the market. I had some money of my own, so I bought him some peaches and a paring knife, and I got him a bag of hard candies too, individually wrapped in cellophane, so that they wouldn’t stick together in the heat. I told him that I’d stolen these provisions, and I think he was impressed. For the short time that he was in Babbington, we were nearly inseparable, although of course I could not let my parents or grandparents know about him. I did introduce him to my great-grandmother, who lived in a room over Big Grandfather’s garage, and it was she who nicknamed him Raskolnikov. He was so taken with her that he gave her the knife I had “stolen” for him, as a gift, after she had given him ten dollars to help him along the road.
Then he simply left. I’ve had many other friends, but each seems to offer only part of what this archetypal friend offered, just as each of the girls and women I knew before I met Albertine could offer only part of everything I found in her.
ANOTHER CHANGE from actual fact was prompted by good taste, rather than by structure or logic or any of the other considerations that ordinarily influence a writer. I have made two of my ancestors, Black Jacques Leroy and his son Fat Hank Leroy, rather tame: two more or less harmless businessmen, whose interests were limited to beer and poetry. I left a lot unsaid, because I knew that if I had dragged in the tales of Black Jacques’s establishing Corinne’s Dockside Bordello, his liaison with his son’s wife, or his role in the Tong Wars between clamming factions, my family would have suffered considerable embarrassment. It was also a question of taste that made me have Fat Hank sell Leroy Lager, although in fact the brewery is still the cornerstone of the tiny Leroy fortune. The stuff has simply become so anemic that it embarrasses me to admit that I’m connected with it.
AT HEART, THOUGH, “Do Clams Bite?” is not about events or people. It is about fear. It is about several boyhood fears: the fear of saying the wrong thing, fear of sex, fear of oblivion, fear of becoming like one’s parents, fear of other boys (especially those who carry knives), and—most of all—the fear of having a hunk of oneself bitten off by a clam. As a boy, I suffered this fear in silence. Only later did I learn that I had not been the only sufferer. Although this fear was not widespread, many boys in Babbington did suffer from it: that group of boys whose fathers or grandfathers were casual clam-diggers, who went right into the water after the clams, feeling for them with their feet, who wore brief woolen bathing suits and stored the clams they caught in the fronts of their suits.
By buttonholing schoolchildren on their way home, I’ve learned that many still suffer from this fear. (The clam in question, by the way, is Mercenaria mercenaria, the hard-shelled quahog, the pinnacle of molluscan evolution, God’s own clam. In other areas, I suppose, oysters, mussels, or scallops occasion a similar dread.) Girls fear for their toes, but in boys this pelecypodophobia centers, as so many boyhood fears do, on the penis. At clambakes, I have seen small boys furtively poking at the insides of clams before eating them, to make sure that no part of an unfortunate lad is hidden there, just as I used to poke at clams when I was as young as they and as firmly in the grip of this terror. Once, not long ago, I found myself next to one of these boys at a table full of cherrystones. When I saw him poking at his clams, I leaned over and whispered to him, “Don’t worry. They don’t bite.” I knew at once that he had understood the point of my remark, for he smiled and nodded his head and then laughed a mad, nervous laugh and began wolfing the clams down with horseradish and gusto.
Peter Leroy
Small’s Island
July 11, 1982
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