So you think you're living a normal life. No one tells you any different. And then you find out you're a government experiment that has been paid for. You're a loan that's coming due.
In 1956 on my fifth birthday Dr. Cameron wrote my father a cheque and with that money my dad bought a new car and a modest house in a suburban project, formerly farmland that had been bulldozed for homes.
I still dont know how boys from England would have found it in those days without GPS but I guess there were maps. Unless of course my dad was the driver that day... which seems unthinkable but on the other hand once you know he was being blackmailed by his Air Force superiors anything is possible.
We were located in a suburb of Montreal which had been thrown up on the banks of the Back River which is what Anglos called la Riviere des Prairies, a sewer-like extension of the Ottawa or Outaouias as it was known to the Mohawks. It had a reputation as a place where children drowned.
To find our little bungalow you had to cross the Pont Viau bridge - that sounds redundant and it is - and our suburb was also called Pont Viau. When we first moved there in 1956, the streets had no names, just numbers - but in 1960 that changed and we were now living on Rue Dauphin.
Many years later - I was already grown up - my mother confided that when I was born she wanted to name me "Jeanne" which in French sounds like "Zhanne" but in English would unevitably become "Jean" or "Jan" and lose all its Gallic charm. So instead she settled for Anne, the silent "e" being a little extra flourish that she hoped would rescue it from total banality. Anne was a common name that year thanks to Princess Anne, born two years earlier, and many girl babies were saddled with it. I think I got the tail end of that fad. To Anne, they added a middle name "Julia" after Julia Jane which was my paternal grandmother's name - and always conjured up a bitter old lady but lately I see the wisdom of that.
My mother had a habit of sometimes asserting herself "in the shadows". So that our souls would not end up in limbo, she baptized my twin brother and me in an emergency ceremony using a pamphlet she obtained from a priest, and never told my father who raised us as reluctant little Presbyterians.
I always felt I had missed the boat by not being allowed to grow up French and Roman Catholic, which was what I felt I really was, or had been, in a parallel life. My soul was French but everything else about me could too easily pass for English.
Was all this about my mother's Norman bloodline or some Auld Alliance that nobody ever mentioned? Or was it about my dad's big mistake which was selling me to McGill - And ten years later in 1966 the military psychiatrists thought it was time to collect on their investment?
Is that how crazy things happened?
As far as my "Joan of Arc" complex, it manifested now and then e.g. in a game of charades in history class where we drew names from a hat and I portrayed the Catholic martyr by putting my hands together in prayer and muttering "Crackle crackle crackle" to symbolize gruesome death by burning at the stake.
As far as my secret life was concerned, it was like a plant deprived of light that learns to climb and adapt. I'd made friends at my new high school in a sedate middle class neighborhood that had no poolhalls or after-school dives just a hot dog stand at the corner which I never even entered.
At the beginning of 10th grade my father all of a sudden decided he had to drive me to school and back every single day, morning and night, as if I needed police protection from having any social life at all.
I should have rebelled but I was afraid to add to his worries. He had borrowed my Underwood typewriter and was writing a mysterious spy novel that he later destroyed. He and my mother often acted like there was a war on and we were being invaded.
Thanks to YouTube I can now revisit how I felt watching the Stones performance on the Ed Sullivan Show on September 11, 1966 - a day that lives in infamy for another reason - it's the day some allege Paul McCartney was killed in a car accident.
I must have watched the show in our living room. The courtly love theme made me squirm a bit. Mick looked uncomfortable in his new Joan of Arc hairdo and the lyrics rang in my ears like a terrible verdict.
Some things are visible only in retrospect and even then ...
This was actually the fourth time I had seen the Stones on Ed Sullivan. The second time was on May 2, 1965 which would have been just a week after Mick came to our basement. Or let's say a week after they wiped my memory (according to the timeline which has him showing up at the house around April 24.)
I just now found this video and it might be the first time I've looked at it since 1965 barring reruns I might have seen back in the sixties - but then my forgetfulness is immense. Brian Jones breaks into a smile around 1:26 and that's something we even talked about at school the next day - my friends and I always feared he was a wee bit nuts. I remember my friend Irene Shanefield (who was always ahead of the rest of us) saying how raunchy and sexual Mick was as the Little Red Rooster:
My childhood was coming to an end, I guess. Although I've been told I never had one.
I almost forgot this May 2 1965 performance until I stumbled across it just now. But it sort of seared itself into my brain and that memory remains, incredibly precise. I think my father watched the show with me and my mother would have been somewhere nearby. What could they have been thinking? As for me, nothing at all. I was all about Mick and his singing. What did I love about him? Everything...
Another grounding detail: the haircut. Same haircut, slightly grown out, as in my dream of opening the door to Mick a week earlier. And let's be clear: I didnt see the Stones in Montreal, not on TV that week and not at the arena on April 23. So how would I know to recognize the haircut? That to me is confirmation even if no one else gets it. It might not be much but it's all I have before this theoretical construct of a recovered memory dissolves for lack of corroborating testimony. My parents have been dead for decades. My twin brother died in 2012. So that leaves only one potential witness.
I would say later - post 65 - they interfered with Mick's hair and those changes showed up in the songs. But here on TV the emotional lines were still open and the message was clear from the heart. So genuine - this was the Mick I thought I knew and kept on looking for.
There was nothing I could do to change the plot that was laid down -all that was left to me was to forget and watch it unfold over the decades.