Johnny America

Five-Sen­tence Novel

by

On the Tues­day be­fore Thanks­giv­ing, Al­ma and Joel, stu­dents at North­east­ern Uni­ver­si­ty and Boston Col­lege, re­spec­tive­ly— un­der­grad­u­ate and grad­u­ate, re­spec­tive­ly — were both aboard Am­trak on their way to Philadel­phia and Bal­ti­more, re­spec­tive­ly, to spend the hol­i­day with their re­spec­tive fam­i­lies when three pas­sen­ger cars de­railed on the no­to­ri­ous­ly per­ilous curve at Frank­ford Junc­tion killing two pas­sen­gers and in­jur­ing fifty-one; yet, de­spite be­ing in the sec­ond of the three cars, Al­ma and Joel suf­fered on­ly mi­nor scrapes so that he was able to car­ry in­jured peo­ple out of the over­turned car and she to tend to them, a joint ef­fort which made a bond that two years lat­er even­tu­at­ed in their mar­ry­ing one another.

Alma’s preg­nan­cy was un­planned, a sur­prise, and turned out to be dif­fi­cult, re­quir­ing an emer­gency Cae­sar­i­an sec­tion with com­pli­ca­tions that meant Al­ma and Joel’s son would on­ly have a broth­er if they adopt­ed, which, af­ter many dis­cus­sions, lengthy ad­vice from their par­ents, and much wa­ver­ing, they did.

The boys were of an age, got on well, were loved equal­ly by their par­ents, lived placid­ly in their leafy sub­urb un­til pu­ber­ty when, al­most overnight, one turned mo­rose, hos­tile, se­cre­tive, alien­at­ed, un­hy­gien­ic, iso­lat­ed, pierced, im­po­lite, dress­ing on­ly in black jeans and black shirts so that, though his class­mates were ter­ri­fied, they weren’t sur­prised when one morn­ing in home room he lift­ed from his back­pack a Kabar hunt­ing knife he’d bought on­line and start­ed swear­ing at and try­ing to slash those of his class­mates who didn’t flee at once, and he was still do­ing this when the School Se­cu­ri­ty Of­fi­cer Sal Ac­cetta burst in and shot him in the chest, a fa­tal shot which the mar­riage of Al­ma and Joel al­so did not sur­vive, and which so trau­ma­tized Of­fi­cer Ac­cetta that four months lat­er he was ad­mit­ted to the Austen Rig­gs Cen­ter in Stock­bridge as a long-term res­i­dent, the fe­ro­cious cost of which was paid by the af­flu­ent suburb’s grudg­ing­ly grate­ful tax­pay­ers aug­ment­ed by a co-re­sponse grant from the Com­mon­wealth of Mass­a­chu­setts’ De­part­ment of Men­tal Health.

Like Al­ma and Joel, Of­fi­cer Ac­cetta and his wife Jeanne had two chil­dren and lost one when his daugh­ter Giu­lia died at the age of three of an un­treat­able con­gen­i­tal heart de­fect, a fate her par­ents had been as­sured would come in­evitably and soon, though the doc­tors couldn’t say ex­act­ly when, so they had time to steel them­selves, get ready to face the blow to­geth­er, al­so to pre­pare Guila’s big broth­er David who, when he had grown up in­to a kind, in­tel­li­gent, and im­pos­ing six-foot-three law stu­dent reg­u­lar­ly drove him­self and his moth­er from Boston to Stock­bridge and back every week­end to vis­it his fa­ther, in the course of which vis­its David fell in love with Be­lin­da Do­her­ty, an at­trac­tive young nurse who, over time, and af­ter many strolls through the Center’s grounds, rec­i­p­ro­cat­ed so that, in due course, they were wed at Saint Mark’s, her family’s church in Pittsfield.

Be­lin­da and David had three chil­dren, all ro­bust in body and mind, the old­est named Sal­va­tore af­ter David’s fa­ther and who from an ear­ly age was ob­sessed by avi­a­tion so that when he en­rolled in Boston Uni­ver­si­ty he al­so signed up for Air Force ROTC, served the re­quired four years, re-upped for an­oth­er four, then left the ser­vice to be­come a pi­lot with Delta Air­lines and was at the con­trols on a flight from Boston to Los An­ge­les when his plane lost one en­gine over Kansas and the land­ing gear jammed so that he had to pull off a near­ly mirac­u­lous bel­ly land­ing at Gar­den City Re­gion­al Air­port, sav­ing all aboard, in­clud­ing the beau­ti­ful and bril­liant clas­si­cal schol­ar Ophe­lia Lang­horne whom I met at a pro­fes­sion­al con­fer­ence three years lat­er and mar­ried last June.

Filed under Fiction on June 19th, 2026

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