Latin As A Second Language

“Do you understand Latin?” Mr. Horace, the vice-principal, asked.
Standing my ground, I admitted to terra firma. After all, I was in the midst of a second trimester of 7th grade Latin. At twelve years of age I was quite small then.

The spilled marbles incident had tripped me up. I must remember to patch the hole in my pocket. Needle and thread.

“Do you know what innuendo means?” Horace asked. He’d closed the door to his office.
“Vaguely,” I replied. "Insinuating something naughty about a valued classmate?"
"Close enough,” he said, torching up a cigar.

When Ms. Strangle heard the marbles roll, every girl in the class had turned and stared at me.

How about ipso facto?” he asked.
“Never heard of it,” I said. “I may have been down with malaria that day.”

“The enemy of one’s enemy, ipso facto, is a friend,” Mr. Horace recited proudly.
Ms. Strangle accuses you. Ray Cole vouches for you.”

Ray, my only friend in the whole world, had pointed at Lucky Lucy Rabbitz, a known felon,
who sat two desks behind me. She’d done hard time somewhere in Tukwila.

“Are you at all familiar with locus delicti?” Horace asked.
“Of course,” I replied. “The scene of a crime. But in this instance, no crime was committed.”
“I’ll be the judge of that,” he said, blowing cigar smoke in my face.

Mother smoked cigars of course, but I got carsick when she did, so I never took it up myself.

“Do you play marbles during recess?’ he asked, his head enveloped in a thick cloud.
“Interdum,” I said. “When the mood strikes.”

“Did the mood strike you this morning?” he asked.
He moved the cigar’s glowing tip close to my face.

“No. I played tether ball to relieve the stress brought on by studying Latin.”

“Ms. Strangle thinks otherwise,” Horace said.

“She has been misinformed,” I said. “An obvious instance of ad absurdum by a consortium of tattlers.” Adding a footnote, “Let’s face it, some people are not cut out to teach 7th grade.”

Mr. Horace let out a giggle. “I was thinking the same thing,” he said, stubbing out his cigar. “Off with you now, kid. Stay out of trouble, do no harm, go to law school, et cetera.”
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Published on July 26, 2019 05:45 Tags: boyhood, friendship, latin
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