At six, Mr. Frendt comes on the P.A. and
shouts, "Welcome to Joysticks!" Then he announces Shirts Off. We take off our
flightjackets and fold them up.
We take off our shirts and fold them up. Our
scarves we leave on. Thomas Kirster's our beautiful boy. He's got long muscles
and bright-blue eyes. The minute his shirt comes off two fat ladies hustle up
the aisle and stick some money in his pants and ask will he be their Pilot. He
says sure. He brings their salads. He brings their soups.
My phone rings and the
caller tells me to come see her in the Spitfire mock-up. Does she want me to be
her Pilot? I'm hoping. Inside the Spitfire is Margie, who says she's been
diagnosed with Chronic Shyness Syndrome, then hands me an Instamatic and offers
me ten bucks for a close-up of Thomas's tush.
Do I do it? Yes I
do.
It could be worse. It is worse for Lloyd Betts. Lately he's put on
weight and his hair's gone thin. He doesn't get a call all shift and waits zero
tables and winds up sitting on the P-51 wing, playing solitaire in a
hunched-over position that gives him big gut rolls.
I Pilot six tables
and make forty dollars in tips plus five an hour in salary.
After
closing we sit on the floor for Debriefing. "There are times," Mr. Frendt says,
"when one must move gracefully to the next station in life, like for example
certain women in Africa or Brazil, I forget which, who either color their faces
or don some kind of distinctive headdress upon achieving menopause. Are you with
me? One of our ranks must now leave us. No one is an island in terms of being
thought cute forever, and so today we must say good-bye to our friend Lloyd.
Lloyd, stand up so we can say good-bye to you. I'm sorry We are all so very
sorry."
"Oh God," says Lloyd. "Let this not be true."
But it's
true. Lloyd's finished. We give him a round of applause, and Frendt gives him a
Farewell Pen and the contents of his locker in a trash bag and out he goes. Poor
Lloyd. He's got a wife and two kids and a sad little duplex on Self-Storage
Parkway.
"It's been a pleasure!" he shouts desperately from the doorway,
trying not to burn any bridges.
What a stressful workplace. The minute
your Cute Rating drops you're a goner. Guests rank us as Knockout, Honeypie,
Adequate, or Stinker. Not that I'm complaining. At least I'm working. At least
I'm not a Stinker like Lloyd.
I'm a solid Honeypie/Adequate, heading
home with forty bucks cash.
. . .
At Sea Oak there's no sea and no oak, just a hundred subsidized apartments and a rear
view of FedEx. Min and Jade are feeding their babies while watching How My
Child Died Violently. Min's my sister. Jade's our cousin. How My Child
Died Violently is hosted by Matt Merton, a six-foot-five blond who's always
giving the parents shoulder rubs and telling them they've been sainted by pain.
Today's show features a ten-year-old who killed a five-year-old for refusing to
join his gang. The ten-year-old strangled the five-year-old with a jump rope,
filled his mouth with baseball cards, then locked himself in the bathroom and
wouldn't come out until his parents agreed to take him to FunTimeZone, where he
confessed, then dove screaming into a mesh cage full of plastic balls. The
audience is shrieking threats at the parents of the killer while the parents of
the victim urge restraint and forgiveness to such an extent that finally the
audience starts shrieking threats at them too.
Then it's a commercial. Min and
Jade put down the babies and light cigarettes and pace the room while studying
aloud for their GEDs. It doesn't look good. Jade says "regicide" is a virus. Min
locates Biafra one planet from Saturn. I offer to help and they start yelling at
me for condescending.
"You're lucky, man!" my sister says. "You did
high school. You got your frigging diploma. We don't. That's why we have to do
this GED shit. If we had our diplomas we could just watch TV and not be all
distracted."
"Really," says Jade. "Now shut it, chick! We got to study.
Show's almost on."
They debate how many sides a triangle has. They
agree that Churchill was in opera. Matt Merton comes back and explains that last
week's show on suicide, in which the parents watched a reenactment of their
son's suicide, was a healing process for the parents, then shows a video of the
parents admitting it was a healing process.
My sister's baby is Troy.
Jade's baby is Mac. They crawl off into the kitchen and Troy gets his finger
caught in the heat vent. Min rushes over and starts pulling.
"Jesus
freaking Christ!" screams Jade. "Watch it! Stop yanking on him and get the
freaking Vaseline. You're going to give him a really long arm,
man!"
Troy starts crying. Mac starts crying. I go over and free Troy no
problem. Meanwhile Jade and Min get in a slap fight and nearly knock over the
TV.
"Yo, chick!" Min shouts at the top of her lungs. "I'm sure you're
slapping me? And then you knock over the freaking TV? Don't you
care?"
"I care!" Jade shouts back. "You're the slut who nearly pulled
off her own kid's finger for no freaking reason, man!"
Just then Aunt
Bernie comes in from DrugTown in her DrugTown cap and hobbles over and picks up
Troy and everything calms way down.
"No need to fuss, little man," she
says. "Everything's fine. Everything's just hunky-dory."
"Hunky-dory,"
says Min, and gives Jade one last pinch.
Aunt Bernie's a peacemaker.
She doesn't like trouble. Once this guy backed over her foot at FoodKing and she
walked home with ten broken bones. She never got married, because Grandpa needed
her to keep house after Grandma died. Then he died and left all his money to a
woman none of us had ever heard of, and Aunt Bernie started in at DrugTown. But
she's not bitter.
Sometimes she's so nonbitter it gets on my nerves. When I say
Sea Oak's a pit she says she's just glad to have a roof over her head. When I
say I'm tired of being broke she says Grandpa once gave her pencils for
Christmas and she was so thrilled she sat around sketching horses all day on the
backs of used envelopes. Once I asked was she sorry she never had kids and she
said no, not at all, and besides, weren't we were her kids?
And I said
yes we were.
But of course we're not.
For dinner it's
beanie-wienies. For dessert it's ice cream with freezer burn.
"What a
nice day we've had," Aunt Bernie says once we've got the babies in
bed.
"Man, what an optometrist," says
Jade.
. . .
Next day is Thursday, which means a
visit from Ed Anders from the Board of Health. He's in charge of ensuring that
our penises never show Also that we don't kiss anyone. None of us ever kisses
anyone or shows his penis except Sonny Vance, who does both, because he's saving
up to buy a FaxIt franchise. As for our Penile Simulators, yes, we can show
them, we can let them stick out the top of our pants, we can even periodically
dampen our tight pants with spray bottles so our Simulators really contour, but
our real penises, no, those have to stay inside our hot uncomfortable oversized
Simulators.
"Sorry fellas, hi fellas," Anders says as he comes wearily
in. "Please know I don't like this any better than you do. I went to school to
learn how to inspect meat, but this certainly wasn't what I had in mind. Ha
ha!"
He orders a Lindbergh Enchilada and eats it cautiously, as if it's
alive and he's afraid of waking it. Sonny Vance is serving soup to a table of
hairstylists on a bender and for a twenty shoots them a quick look at his
unit.
Just then Anders glances up from his Lindbergh.
"Oh for
crying out loud," he says, and writes up a Shutdown and we all get sent home
early. Which is bad. Every dollar counts. Lately I've been sneaking toilet paper
home in my briefcase. I can fit three rolls in. By the time I get home they're
usually flat and don't work so great on the roller but still it saves a few
bucks.
I clock out and cut through the strip of forest behind FedEx.
Very pretty. A raccoon scurries over a fallen oak and starts nibbling at a rusty
bike. As I come out of the woods I hear a shot. At least I think it's a shot. It
could be a backfire. But no, it's a shot, because then there's another one, and
some kids sprint across the courtyard yelling that Big Scary Dawgz
rule.
I run home. Min and Jade and Aunt Bernie and the babies are
huddled behind the couch. Apparently they had the babies outside when the
shooting started. Troy's walker got hit. Luckily he wasn't in it. It's supposed
to look like a duck but now the beak's missing.
"Man, fuck this shit!"
Min shouts.
"Freak this crap you mean," says Jade. "You want them
growing up with shit-mouths like us? Crap-mouths I mean?"
"I just want
them growing up, period," says Min.
"Boo-hoo, Miss Dramatic," says
Jade.
"Fuck off, Miss Ho," shouts Min.
"I mean it, jagoff, I'm
not kidding," shouts Jade, and punches Min in the arm.
"Girls, for
crying out loud!" says Aunt Bernie. "We should be thankful. At least we got a
home. And at least none of them bullets actually hit nobody."
"No
offense, Bernie?" says Min. "But you call this a freaking home?"
Sea
Oak's not safe. There's an ad hoc crackhouse in the laundry room and last week
Min found some brass knuckles in the kiddie pool. If I had my way I'd move
everybody up to Canada. It's nice there. Very polite. We went for a weekend last
fall and got a flat tire and these two farmers with bright-red faces insisted on
fixing it, then springing for dinner, then starting a college fund for the
babies.
They sent us the stock certificates a week later, along with a photo of
all of us eating cobbler at a diner. But moving to Canada takes bucks. Dad's
dead and left us nada and Ma now lives with Freddie, who doesn't like us, plus
he's not exactly rich himself. He does phone polls. This month he's asking
divorced women how often they backslide and sleep with their exes. He gets ten
bucks for every completed poll.
So not lucrative, and Canada's a moot
point.
I go out and find the beak of Troy's duck and fix it with
Elmer's.
"Actually you know what?" says Aunt Bernie. "I think that
looks even more like a real duck now Because some-times their beaks are cracked?
I seen one like that down-town."
"Oh my God," says Min. "The kid's duck
gets shot in the face and she says we're lucky."
"Well, we are lucky,"
says Bernie.
"Somebody's beak is cracked," says Jade.
"You
know what I do if something bad happens?" Bernie says. "I don't think about it.
Don't take it so serious. It ain't the end of the world. That's what I do.
That's what I always done. That's how I got where I am."
My feeling is,
Bernie, I love you, but where are you? You work at DrugTown for minimum. You're
sixty and own nothing. You were basically a slave to your father and never had a
date in your life.
"I mean, complain if you want," she says. "But I
think we're doing pretty darn good for ourselves."
"Oh, we're doing
great," says Min, and pulls Troy out from behind the couch and brushes some duck
shards off his sleeper.
. . .
Joysticks reopens on Friday. It's a madhouse. They've got the fog on. A bridge club offers me fifteen bucks to oil-wrestle Mel Turner. So I oil-wrestle Mel Turner. They offer me twenty bucks to feed them chicken wings from my hand. So I feed them chicken wings from my hand. The afternoon flies by. Then the evening. At nine the bridge club leaves and I get a sorority. They sing intelligent nasty songs and grope my Simulator and say they'll never be able to look their boyfriends' meager genitalia in the eye again. Then Mr. Frendt comes over and says phone.
It's Min. She sounds crazy. Four times in a row she shrieks
get home. When I tell her calm down, she hangs up. I call back and no one
answers. No biggie. Min's prone to panic. Probably one of the babies is puky.
Luckily I'm on FlexTime.
"I'll be back," I say to Mr.
Frendt.
"I look forward to it," he says.
I jog across the
marsh and through FedEx. Up on the hill there's a light from the last remaining
farm. Sometimes we take the boys to the adjacent car wash to look at the cow.
Tonight however the cow is elsewhere.
At home Min and Jade are hopping
up and down in front of Aunt Bernie, who's sitting very very still at one end of
the couch.
"Keep the babies out!" shrieks Min." I don't want them
seeing something dead!"
"Shut up, man!" shrieks Jade." Don't call her
something dead!"
She squats down and pinches Aunt Bernie's
cheek.
"Aunt Bernie?" she shrieks. "Fuck!"
"We already tried
that like twice, chick!" shrieks Min. "Why are you doing that shit again? Touch
her neck and see if you can feel that beating thing!"
"Shit shit shit!"
shrieks Jade.
I call 911 and the paramedics come out and work hard for
twenty minutes, then give up and say they're sorry and it looks like she's been
dead most of the afternoon. The apartment's a mess. Her money drawer's empty and
her family photos are in the bathtub.
"Not a mark on her," says a
cop.
"I suspect she died of fright," says another. "Fright of the
intruder?"
"My guess is yes," says a paramedic.
"Oh God," says
Jade. "God, God, God."
I sit down beside Bernie. I think: I am so
sorry. I'm sorry I wasn't here when it happened and sorry you never had any fun
in your life and sorry I wasn't rich enough to move you somewhere safe. I
remember when she was young and wore pink stretch pants and made us paper chains
out of DrugTown receipts while singing "Froggie Went A-Courting." All her life
she worked hard. She never hurt anybody. And now this.
Scared to death
in a crappy apartment.
Min puts the babies in the kitchen but they keep
crawling out. Aunt Bernie's in a shroud on this sort of dolly and on the couch
are a bunch of forms to sign.
We call Ma and Freddie. We get their
machine.
"Ma, pick up!" says Min. "Something bad happened! Ma, please
freaking pick up!"
But nobody picks up.
So we leave a
message.
. . .
Lobton's funeral parlor is just a regular
house on a regular street. Inside there's a rack of brochures with titles like
"Why Does My Loved One Appear Somewhat Larger?" Lobton looks healthy. Maybe too
healthy. He's wearing a yellow golf shirt and his biceps keep involuntarily
flexing. Every now and then he touches his delts as if to confirm they're still
big as softballs.
"Such a sad thing," he says.
"How much?"
asks Jade. "I mean, like for basic. Not superfancy."
"But not crappy
either," says Min. "Our aunt was the best."
"What price range were you
considering?" says Lobton, cracking his knuckles. We tell him and his eyebrows
go up and he leads us to something that looks like a moving box.
"Prior
to usage we'll moisture-proof this with a spray lacquer," he says. "Makes it
look quite woodlike."
"That's all we can get?" says Jade.
"Cardboard?"
"I'm actually offering you a slight break already," he
says, and does a kind of push-up against the wall. "On account of the tragic
circumstances. This is Sierra Sunset. Not exactly cardboard. More of a
fiberboard."
"I don't know" says Min. "Seems pretty
gyppy."
"Can we think about it?" says Ma.
"Absolutely," says
Lobton. "Last time I checked this was still America."
I step over and
take a closer look. There are staples where Aunt Bernie's spine would be.
Down
at the foot there's some writing about Folding Tab A into Slot B.
"No
freaking way," says Jade." Work your whole life and end up in a Mayflower box? I
doubt it."
We've got zip in savings. We sit at a desk and Lobton does
what he calls a Credit Calc. If we pay it out monthly for seven years we can
afford the Amber Mist, which includes a double-thick balsa box and two coats of
lacquer and a one-hour wake.
"But seven years, jeez," says
Ma.
"We got to get her the good one," says Min. "She never had anything
nice in her life."
So Amber Mist it
is.
. . .
We bury her at St. Leo's, on the hill up near BastCo. Her part of the
graveyard's pretty plain. No angels, no little rock houses, no flowers, just a
bunch of flat stones like parking bumpers and here and there a Styrofoam cup.
Father Brian says a prayer and then one of us is supposed to talk. But what's
there to say? She never had a life. Never married, no kids, work work work. Did
she ever go on a cruise?
All her life it was buses. Buses buses buses. Once she
went with Ma on a bus to Quigley, Kansas, to gamble and shop at an outlet mall.
Someone broke into her room and stole her clothes and took a dump in her
suitcase while they were at the Roy Clark show. That was it. That was the extent
of her tourism. After that it was DrugTown, night and day. After fifteen years
as Cashier she got demoted to Greeter. People would ask where the cold remedies
were and she'd point to some big letters on the wall that said Cold
Remedies.
Freddie, Ma's boyfriend, steps up and says he didn't know her
very long but she was an awful nice lady and left behind a lot of love, etc.
etc. blah blah blah. While it's true she didn't do much in her life, still she
was very dear to those of us who knew her and never made a stink about anything
but was always content with whatever happened to her, etc. etc. blah blah
blah.
Then it's over and we're supposed to go away.
"We gotta
come out here like every week," says Jade.
"I know I will," says
Min.
"What, like I won't?" says Jade. "She was so freaking
nice.
"I'm sure you swear at a grave," says Min.
"Since when
is freak a swear, chick?" says Jade.
"Girls," says Ma.
"I hope
I did okay in what I said about her," says Freddie in his full-of-crap way,
smelling bad of English Navy. "Actually I sort of surprised
myself."
"Bye-bye, Aunt Bernie," says Min.
"Bye-bye, Bern,"
says Jade.
"Oh my dear sister," says Ma.
I scrunch my eyes
tight and try to picture her happy, laughing, poking me in the ribs. But all I
can see is her terrified on the couch. It's awful. Out there, somewhere, is
whoever did it. Someone came in our house, scared her to death, watched her die,
went through our stuff, stole her money. Someone who's still living, someone who
right now might be having a piece of pie or running an errand or scratching his
ass, someone who, if he wanted to, could drive west for three days or whatever
and sit in the sun by the ocean.
We stand a few minutes with heads down
and hands folded.
. . .
Afterward Freddie takes us to
Trabanti's for lunch. Last year Trabanti died and three Vietnamese families went
in together and bought the place, and it still serves pasta and pizza and the
big oil of Trabanti is still on the wall but now from the kitchen comes this
very pretty Vietnamese music and the food is somehow better.
Freddie
proposes a toast. Min says remember how Bernie always called lunch dinner and
dinner supper? Jade says remember how when her jaw clicked she'd say she needed
oil?
"She was a excellent lady," says Freddie.
"I already miss
her so bad," says Ma.
"I'd like to kill that fuck that killed her,"
says Min.
"How about let's don't say fuck at lunch," says
Ma.
"It's just a word, Ma, right?" says Min. "Like pluck is just a
word? You don't mind if I say pluck? Pluck pluck pluck?"
"Well, shit's
just a word too," says Freddie. "But we don't say it at lunch."
"Same
with puke," says Ma.
"Shit puke, shit puke," says Min.
The
waiter clears his throat. Ma glares at Min.
"I love you girls'
manners," Ma says.
"Especially at a funeral," says
Freddie.
"This ain't a funeral," says Min.
"The question in my
mind is what you kids are gonna do now" says Freddie." Because I consider this
whole thing a wake-up call, meaning it's time for you to pull yourselfs up by
the bootstraps like I done and get out of that dangerous craphole you're living
at."
"Mr. Phone Poll speaks," says Min.
"Anyways it ain't that
dangerous," says Jade.
"A woman gets killed and it ain't that
dangerous?" says Freddie.
"All's we need is a dead bolt and a eyehole,"
says Min.
"What's a bootstrap," says Jade.
"It's like a strap
on a boot, you doof," says Min.
"Plus where we gonna go?" says Min.
"Can we move in with you guys?"
"I personally would love that and you
know that," says Freddie. "But who would not love that is our
landlord."
"I think what Freddie's saying is it's time for you girls to
get jobs," says Ma.
"Yeah right, Ma," says Min. "After what happened
last time?"
When I first moved in, Jade and Min were working the info
booth at HardwareNiche. Then one day we picked the babies up at day care and
found Troy sitting naked on top of the washer and Mac in the yard being nipped
by a Pekingese and the day-care lady sloshed and playing KillerBirds on
Nintendo.
So that was that. No more HardwareNiche.
"Maybe one
could work, one could baby-sit?" says Ma.
"I don't see why I should
have to work so she can stay home with her baby," says Min.
"And I
don't see why I should have to work so she can stay home with her baby," says
Jade.
"It's like a freaking veece versa," says Min.
"Let me
tell you something," says Freddie. "Something about this country. Anybody can do
anything. But first they gotta try. And you guys ain't. Two don't work and one
strips naked? I don't consider that trying. You kids make squat. And therefore
you live in a dangerous craphole. And what happens in a dangerous craphole? Bad
tragic shit. It's the freaking American way-you start out in a dangerous
craphole and work hard so you can someday move up to a somewhat less dangerous
craphole. And finally maybe you get a mansion. But at this rate you ain't even
gonna make it to the somewhat less dangerous craphole."
"Like you live
in a mansion," says Jade.
"I do not claim to live in no mansion," says
Freddie. "But then again I do not live in no slum. The other thing I also do not
do is strip naked."
"Thank God for small favors," says
Min.
"Anyways he's never actually naked," says Jade.
Which is
true. I always have on at least a T-back.
"No wonder we never take
these kids out to a nice lunch," says Freddie.
"I do not even consider
this a nice lunch," says Min.
. . .
For dinner Jade microwaves some Stars-n-Flags. They're addictive. They put sugar in the sauce and sugar in
the meat nuggets. I think also caffeine. Someone told me the brown streaks in
the Flags are caffeine. We have like five bowls each.
After dinner the
babies get fussy and Min puts a mush of ice cream and Hershey's syrup in their
bottles and we watch The Worst That Could Happen, a half-hour of computer
simulations of tragedies that have never actually occurred but theoretically
could. A kid gets hit by a train and flies into a zoo, where he's eaten by
wolves. A man cuts his hand off chopping wood and while wandering around
screaming for help is picked up by a tornado and dropped on a preschool during
recess and lands on a pregnant teacher.
"I miss Bernie so bad," says
Min.
"Me too," Jade says sadly.
The babies start howling for
more ice cream.
"That is so cute," says Jade. "They're like, Give it
the fuck up!" "We'll give it the fuck up, sweeties, don't worry,"
says Min. "We didn't forget about you."
Then the phone rings. It's
Father Brian. He sounds weird. He says he's sorry to bother us so late. But
something strange has happened. Something bad. Something sort of, you know,
unspeakable. Am I sitting? I'm not but I say I am.
Apparently someone
has defaced Bernie's grave.
My first thought is there's no stone. It's
just grass. How do you deface grass? What did they do, pee on the grass on the
grave? But Father's nearly in tears.
So I call Ma and Freddie and tell
them to meet us, and we get the babies up and load them into the
K-car.
"Deface," says Jade on the way over. "What does that mean,
deface?"
"It means like fucked it up," says Min.
"But how?"
says Jade. "I mean, like what did they do?"
"We don't know, dumbass,"
says Min." That's why we're going there."
"And why?" says Jade. "Why
would someone do that?"
"Check out Miss Shreelock Holmes," says Min.
"Someone done that because someone is a asshole."
"Someone is a
big-time asshole," says Jade.
Father Brian meets us at the gate with a
flashlight and a golf cart.
"When I saw this," he says." I literally
sat down in astonishment. Nothing like this has ever happened here. I am so
sorry. You seem like nice people."
We're too heavy and the wheels spin
as we climb the hill, so I get out and jog alongside.
"Okay, folks,
brace yourselves," Father says, and shuts off the engine.
Where the
grave used to be is just a hole. Inside the hole is the Amber Mist, with the top
missing. Inside the Amber Mist is nothing. No Aunt Bernie.
"What the
hell," says Jade. "Where's Bernie?"
"Somebody stole Bernie?" says
Min.
"At least you folks have retained your feet," says Father Brian.
"I'm telling you I literally sat right down. I sat right down on that pile of
dirt. I dropped as if shot. See that mark? That's where I sat."
On the
pile of grave dirt is a butt-shaped mark.
The cops show up and one
climbs down in the hole with a tape measure and a camera. After three or four
flashes he climbs out and hands Ma a pair of blue pumps.
"Her little
shoes," says Ma. "Oh my God."
"Are those them?" says
Jade.
"Those are them," says Min.
"I am freaking out," says
Jade.
"I am totally freaking out," says Min.
"I'm gonna sit,"
says Ma, and drops into the golf cart.
"What I don't get is who'd want
her?" says Min.
"She was just this lady," says
Jade.
"Typically it's teens?" one cop says. "Typically we find the
loved one nearby? Once we found the loved one nearby with, you know, a cigarette
between its lips, wearing a sombrero? These kids today got a lot more nerve than
we ever did. I never would've dreamed of digging up a dead corpse when I was a
teen. You might tip over a stone, sure, you might spray-paint something on a
crypt, you might, you know, give a wino a hotfoot."
"But this, jeez,"
says Freddie. "This is a entirely different ballgame."
"Boy howdy,"
says the cop, and we all look down at the shoes in Ma's hands.
. . .
Next day I go back to work. I don't feel
like it but we need the money. The grass is wet and it's hard getting across the
ravine in my dress shoes. The soles are slick. Plus they're too tight. Several
times I fall forward on my briefcase. Inside the briefcase are my T-backs and a
thing of mousse.
Right off the bat I get a tableful of MediBen women
seated under a banner saying BEST OF LUCK, BEATRICE, NO HARD FEELINGS. I take
off my shirt and serve their salads. I take off my flight pants and serve their
soups. One drops a dollar on the floor and tells me feel free to pick it
up.
I pick it up.
"Not like that, not like that," she says.
"Face the other way, so when you bend we can see your crack."
I've done
this about a million times, but somehow I can't do it now
I look at
her. She looks at me.
"What?" she says. "I'm not allowed to say that? I
thought that was the whole point."
"That is the whole point, Phyllis,"
says another lady. "You stand your ground."
"Look;" Phyllis says.
"Either bend how I say or give back the dollar. I think that's
fair."
"You go, girl," says her friend.
I give back the
dollar. I return to the Locker Area and sit awhile. For the first time ever, I'm
voted Stinker. There are thirteen women at the MediBen table and they all vote
me Stinker. Do the MediBen women know my situation? Would they vote me Stinker
if they did? But what am I supposed to do, go out and say, Please ladies, my
aunt just died, plus her body's missing?
Mr. Frendt pulls me
aside.
"Perhaps you need to go home," he says. "I'm sorry for your
loss. But I'd like to encourage you not to behave like one of those Comanche
ladies who bite off their index fingers when a loved one dies. Grief is good,
grief is fine, but too much grief, as we all know, is excessive. If your aunt's
death has filled your mouth with too many bitten-off fingers, for crying out
loud, take a week off, only don't take it out on our Guests, they didn't kill
your dang aunt."
But I can't afford to take a week off. I can't even
afford to take a few days off.
"We really need the money," I
say.
"Is that my problem?" he says. "Am I supposed to let you dance
without vigor just because you need the money? Why don't I put an ad in the
paper for all sad people who need money? All the town's sad could come here and
strip. Good-bye. Come back when you feel halfway normal."
From the pay
phone I call home to see if they need anything from the
FoodSoQuik.
"Just come home," Min says stiffly. "Just come straight
home."
"What is it?" I say.
"Come home," she
says.
Maybe someone's found the body. I imagine Bernie naked, Bernie
chopped in two, Bernie posed on a bus bench. I hope and pray that something only
mildly bad's been done to her, something we can live with.
At home the
door's wide open. Min and Jade are sitting very still on the couch, babies in
their laps, staring at the rocking chair, and in the rocking chair is Bernie.
Bernie's body.
Same perm, same glasses, same blue dress we buried her
in.
What's it doing here? Who could be so cruel? And what are we
supposed to do with it?
Then she turns her head and looks at
me.
"Sit the fuck down," she says.
In life she never
swore.
I sit. Min squeezes and releases my hand, squeezes and releases,
squeezes and releases.
"You, mister," Bernie says to me, "are going to
start showing your cock. You'll show it and show it. You go up to a lady, if she
wants to see it, if she'll pay to see it, I'll make a thumbprint on the
forehead. You see the thumbprint, you ask. I'll try to get you five a day, at
twenty bucks a pop. So a hundred bucks a day. Seven hundred a week. And that's
cash, so no taxes. No withholding. See? That's the beauty of it."
She's
got dirt in her hair and dirt in her teeth and her hair is a mess and her tongue
when it darts out to lick her lips is black.
"You, Jade," she says.
"Tomorrow you start work. Andersen Labels, Fifth and Rivera. Dress up when you
go. Wear something nice. Show a little leg. And don't chomp your gum. Ask for
Len. At the end of the month, we take the money you made and the cock money and
get a new place. Somewhere safe. That's part one of Phase One.
You, Min. You
baby-sit. Plus you quit smoking. Plus you learn how to cook. No more food out of
cans. We gotta eat right to look our best. Because I am getting me so many
lovers. Maybe you kids don't know this but I died a freaking virgin. No babies,
no lovers. Nothing went in, nothing came out. Ha ha! Dry as a bone, completely
wasted, this pretty little thing God gave me between my legs. Well I am going to
have lovers now, you fucks!
Like in the movies, big shoulders and all, and a
summer house, and nice trips, and in the morning in my room a big vase of
flowers, and I'm going to get my nipples hard standing in the breeze from the
ocean, eating shrimp from a cup, you sons of bitches, while my lover watches me
from the veranda, his big shoulders shining, all hard for me, that's one damn
thing I will guarantee you kids! Ha ha! You think I'm joking? I ain't freaking
joking.
I never got nothing! My life was shit! I was never even up in a freaking
plane. But that was that life and this is this life. My new life. Cover me up
now! With a blanket. I need my beauty rest. Tell anyone I'm here, you all die.
Plus they die. Whoever you tell, they die. I kill them with my mind. I can do
that. I am very freaking strong now. I got powers! So no visitors. I don't
exactly look my best. You got it? You all got it?"
We nod. I go for a
blanket. Her hands and feet are shaking and she's grinding her teeth and one
falls out.
"Put it over me, you fuck, all the way over!" she screams,
and I put it over her.
We sneak off with the babies and whisper in the
kitchen.
"It looks like her," says Min.
"It is her," I
say.
"It is and it ain't," says Jade.
"We better do what she
says," Min says.
"No shit," Jade says.
All night she sits in
the rocker under the blanket, shaking and swearing.
All night we sit in
Min's bed, fully dressed, holding hands.
"See how strong I am!" she
shouts around midnight, and there's a cracking sound, and when I go out the
door's been torn off the microwave but she's still sitting in the
chair.
. . .
In the morning she's still there, shaking and swearing.
"Take the
blanket off!" she screams." It's time to get this show on the road."
I
take the blanket off. The smell is not good. One ear is now in her lap. She
keeps absentmindedly sticking it back on her head.
"You, Jade!" she
shouts. "Get dressed. Go get that job. When you meet Len, bend forward a little.
Let him see down your top. Give him some hope. He's a sicko, but
we need him. You, Min! Make breakfast. Something homemade. Like
biscuits."
"Why don't you make it with your powers?" says
Min.
"Don't be a smartass!" screams Bernie. "You see what I did to that
microwave?"
"I don't know how to make freaking biscuits," Min
wails.
"You know how to read, right?" Bernie shouts. "You ever heard of
a recipe? You ever been in the grave? It sucks so bad! You regret all the things
you never did. You little bitches are gonna have a very bad time in the grave
unless you get on the stick, believe me! Turn down the thermostat! Make it cold.
I like cold. Something's off with my body. I don't feel right."
I turn
down the thermostat. She looks at me.
"Go show your cock!" she shouts.
"That is the first part of Phase One. After we get the new place, that's the end
of the first part of Phase Two. You'll still show your cock, but only three days
a week. Because you'll start community college. Pre-law. Pre-law is best. You'll
be a whiz. You ain't dumb. And Jade'll work weekends to make up for the decrease
in cock money. See? See how that works? Now get out of here. What are you gonna
do?"
"Show my cock?" I say.
"Show your cock, that's right,"
she says, and brushes back her hair with her hand, and a huge wad comes out,
leaving her almost bald on one side.
"Oh God," says Min. "You know
what? No way me and the babies are staying here alone."
"You ain't
alone," says Bernie. "I'm here."
"Please don't go," Min says to
me.
"Oh, stop it," Bernie says, and the door flies open and I feel a
sort of invisible fist punching me in the back.
Outside it's sunny. A
regular day. A guy's changing his oil. The clouds are regular clouds and the
sun's the regular sun and the only nonregular thing is that my clothes smell
like Bernie, a combo of wet cellar and rotten bacon.
Work goes well. I
manage to keep smiling and hide my shaking hands, and my midshift rating is
Honeypie. After lunch this older woman comes up and says I look so much like a
real Pilot she can hardly stand it.
On her head is a thumbprint. Like
Ash Wednesday, only sort of glowing.
I don't know what to do. Do I just
come out and ask if she wants to see my cock? What if she says no? What if I get
caught? What if I show her and she doesn't think it's worth twenty
bucks?
Then she asks if I'll surprise her best friend with a birthday
table dance. She points out her friend. A pretty girl, no thumbprint. Looks
somehow familiar.
We start over and at about twenty feet I realize it's
Angela.
Angela Silveri.
We dated senior year. Then Dad died
and Ma had to take a job at Patty-Melt Depot. From all the grease Ma got a bad
rash and could barely wear a blouse. Plus Min was running wild. So Angela would
come over and there'd be Min getting high under a tarp on the carport and Ma
sitting in her bra on a kitchen stool with a fan pointed at her gut. Angela had
dreams. She had plans.
In her notebook she pasted a picture of an office from
the J. C. Penney catalogue and under it wrote, My (someday?) office. Once
we saw this black Porsche and she said very nice but make hers red. The last
straw was Ed Edwards, a big drunk, one of Dad's cousins. Things got so bad Ma
rented him the utility room. One night Angela and I were making out on the couch
late when Ed came in soused and started peeing in the dishwasher.
What
could I say? He's only barely related to me? He hardly ever does
that?
Angela's eyes were like these little pies.
I walked her
home, got no kiss, came back, cleaned up the dishwasher as best I could. A few
days later I got my class ring in the mail and a copy of The
Prophet.
You will always be my first love, she'd written inside.
But now my path converges to a higher ground. Be well always. Walk in joy
Please don't think me cruel, it's lust that I want so much in terms of
accomplishment, plus I couldn't believe that guy peed right on your
dishes. No way am I table dancing for Angela Silveri. No way am I
asking Angela Silveri's friend if she wants to see my cock. No way am I hanging
around here so Angela can see me in my flight jacket and T-backs and wonder to
herself how I went so wrong etc. etc.
I hide in the kitchen until my
shift is done, then walk home very, very slowly because I'm afraid of what
Bernie's going to do to me when I get there.
. . .
Min meets me at the door. She's
got flour all over her blouse and it looks like she's been crying.
"I
can't take any more of this," she says. "She's like falling apart. I mean shit's
falling off her. Plus she made me bake a freaking pie."
On the table is
a very lumpy pie. One of Bernie's arms is now disconnected and lying across her
lap.
"What are you thinking of!" she shouts. "You didn't show your cock
even once? You think it's easy making those thumbprints? You try it, smartass!
Do you or do you not know the plan? You gotta get us out of here! And to get us
out, you gotta use what you got. And you ain't got much. A nice face. And a
decent unit. Not huge, but shaped nice."
"Bernie, God," says
Min.
"What, Miss Priss?" shouts Bernie, and slams the severed arm down
hard on her lap, and her other ear falls off.
"I'm sorry, but this is
too fucking sickening," says Min. "I'm going out."
"What's sickening?"
says Bernie. "Are you saying I'm sickening? Well, I think you're sickening. So
many wonderful things in life and where's your mind? You think with your lazy
ass. Whatever life hands you, you take. You're not going anywhere. You're
staying home and studying."
"I'm what?" says Min. "Studying what? I
ain't studying. Chick comes into my house and starts ordering me to study? I
freaking doubt it."
"You don't know nothing!" Bernie says. "What fun is
life when you don't know nothing? You can't find your own town on the map. You
can't name a single president. When we go to Rome you won't know nothing about
the history. You're going to study the World Book. Do we still have those World
Books?"
"Yeah right," says Min. "We're going to Rome."
"We'll
go to Rome when he's a lawyer," says Bernie.
"Dream on, chick," says
Min. "And we'll go to Mars when I'm a stockbreaker."
"Don't you dare
make fun of me!" Bernie shouts, and our only vase goes flying across the room
and nearly nails Min in the head.
"She's been like this all day," says
Min.
"Like what?" shouts Bernie. "We had a perfectly nice
day."
"She made me help her try on my bras," says Min.
"I
never had a nice sexy bra," says Bernie.
"And now mine are all ruined,"
says Min. "They got this sort of goo on them."
"You ungrateful shit!"
shouts Bernie. "Do you know what I'm doing for you? I'm saving your boy. And you
got the nerve to say I made goo on your bras! Troy's gonna get caught in a
crossfire in the courtyard. In September. September eighteenth. He's gonna get
thrown off his little trike. With one leg twisted under him and blood pouring
out of his ear. It's a freaking prophecy.
You know that word? It means
prediction. You know that word? You think I'm bullshitting? Well I ain't
bullshitting. I got the power. Watch this: All day Jade sat licking labels at a
desk by a window. Her boss bought everybody subs for lunch. She's bringing some
home in a green bag."
"That ain't true about Troy, is it?" says Min.
"Is it? I don't believe it."
"Turn on the TV!" Bernie shouts. "Give me
the changer."
I turn on the TV I give her the changer. She puts on
Nathan's Body Shop. Nathan says washboard abs drive the women wild. Then
there's a close-up of his washboard abs.
"Oh yes," says Bernie. "Them
are for me. I'd like to give those a lick. A lick and a pinch. I'd like to sort
of straddle those things."
Just then Jade comes through the door with a
big green bag.
"Oh God," says Min.
"Told you so!" says Bernie,
and pokes Min in the ribs. "Ha ha! I really got the power!"
"I don't
get it," Min says, all desperate. "What happens? Please. What happens to him?
You better freaking tell me."
"I already told you," Bernie says. "He'll
fly about fifteen feet and live about three minutes."
"Bernie, God,"
Min says, and starts to cry. "You used to be so nice."
"I'm still so
nice," says Bernie, and bites into a sub and takes off the tip of her finger and
starts chewing it up.
. . .
Just after dawn she shouts out my name.
"Take the blanket off," she says. "I ain't
feeling so good."
I take the blanket off. She's basically just this
pile of parts: both arms in her lap, head on the arms, heel of one foot touching
the heel of the other, all of it sort of wrapped up in her dress.
"Get
me a washcloth," she says." Do I got a fever? I feel like I got a fever. Oh, I
knew it was too good to be true. But okay. New plan. New plan. I'm changing the
first part of Phase One. If you see two thumbprints, that means the lady'll
screw you for cash. We're in a fix here. We gotta speed this up. There ain't
gonna be nothing left of me. Who's gonna be my lover now?"
The doorbell
rings.
"Son of a bitch," Bernie snarls.
It's Father Brian with
a box of doughnuts. I step out quick and close the door behind me. He says he's
just checking in. Perhaps we'd like to talk? Perhaps we're feeling some residual
anger about Bernie's situation? Which would of course be completely
understandable. Once when he was a young priest someone broke in and drew a
mustache on the Virgin Mary with a permanent marker, and for weeks he was
tortured by visions of bending back the finger of the vandal until he or she
burst into tears of apology.
"I knew that wasn't appropriate," he says.
"I knew that by indulging in that fantasy I was honoring violence. And yet it
gave me pleasure. I also thought of catching them in the act and boinking them
in the head with a rock. I also thought of jumping up and down on their backs
until something in their spinal column cracked. Actually I had about a million
ideas. But you know what I did instead? I scrubbed and scrubbed our Holy Mother,
and soon she was as good as new. Her statue, I mean. She herself of course is
always good as new."
From inside comes the sound of breaking glass.
Breaking glass and then something heavy falling, and Jade yelling and Min
yelling and the babies crying.
"Oops, I guess?" he says. "I've come at
a bad time? Look, all I'm trying to do is urge you, if at all possible, to
forgive the perpetrators, as I forgave the perpetrator that drew on my Virgin
Mary. The thing lost, after all, is only your aunt's body, and what is
essential, I assure you, is elsewhere, being well taken care of."
I
nod. I smile. I say thanks for stopping by. I take the doughnuts and go back
inside.
The TV's broke and the refrigerator's tipped over and Bernie's
parts are strewn across the living room like she's been shot out of a
cannon.
"She tried to get up," says Jade.
"I don't know where
the hell she thought she was going," says Min.
"Come here," the head
says to me, and I squat down. "That's it for me. I'm fucked. As per usual.
Always the bridesmaid, never the bride. Although come to think of it I was never
even the freaking bridesmaid. Look, show your cock. It's the shortest line
between two points. The world ain't giving away nice lives. You got a trust
fund? You a genius? Show your cock. It's what you got. And remember: Troy in
September. On his trike. One leg twisted. Don't forget. And also. Don't remember
me like this. Remember me like how I was that night we all went to Red Lobster
and I had that new perm. Ah Christ. At least buy me a stone."
I rub her
shoulder, which is next to her foot.
"We loved you," I
say.
"Why do some people get everything and I got nothing?" she says.
"Why? Why was that?"
"I don't know," I say.
"Show your cock,"
she says, and dies again.
We stand there looking down at the pile of
parts. Mac crawls toward it and Min moves him back with her foot.
"This
is too freaking much," says Jade, and starts crying.
"What do we do
now?" says Min.
"Call the cops," Jade says.
"And say what?"
says Min.
We think about this awhile.
I get a Hefty bag. I get
my winter gloves.
"I ain't watching," says Jade.
"I ain't
watching either;" says Min, and they take the babies into the
bedroom.
I close my eyes and wrap Bernie up in the Hefty bag and
twistie-tie the bag shut and lug it out to the trunk of the K-car. I throw in a
shovel. I drive up to St. Leo's. I lower the bag into the hole using a bungee
cord, then fill the hole back in.
Down in the city are the nice houses
and the so-so houses and the lovers making out in dark yards and the babies
crying for their moms, and I wonder if, other than Jesus, this has ever happened
before. Maybe it happens all the time. Maybe there's angry dead all over, hiding
in rooms, covered with blankets, bossing around their scared, embarrassed
relatives.
Because how would we know?
I for sure don't plan on
broadcasting this.
I smooth over the dirt and say a quick prayer: If it
was wrong for her to come back, forgive her, she never got beans in this life,
plus she was trying to help us.
At the car I think of an additional
prayer: But please don't let her come back again.
. . .
When I get home the babies are asleep and Jade
and Min are watching a phone-sex infomercial, three girls in leather jumpsuits
eating bananas in Slo-mo while across the screen runs a constant disclaimer:
"Not Necessarily the Girls Who Man the Phones! Not Necessarily the Girls Who Man
the Phones!"
"Them chicks seem to really be enjoying those bananas,"
says Min in a thin little voice.
"I like them jumpsuits though," says
Jade.
"Yeah them jumpsuits look decent," says Min.
Then they
look up at me. I've never seen them so sad and beat and sick.
"It's
done," I say.
Then we hug and cry and promise never to forget Bernie
the way she really was, and I use some Resolve on the rug and they go do some
reading in their World Books.
Next day I go in early. I don't see a
single thumbprint. But it doesn't matter. I get with Sonny Vance and he tells me
how to do it. First you ask the woman would she like a private tour. Then you
show her the fake P-40, the Gallery of Historical Aces, the shower stall where
we get oiled up, etc. etc. and then in the hall near the rest room you ask if
there's anything else she'd like to see. It's sleazy. It's gross. But when I do
it I think of September. September and Troy in the crossfire, his little leg
bent under him etc. etc.
Most say no but quite a few say
yes.
I've got a place picked out at a complex called Swan's Glen.
They've never had a shooting or a knifing and the public school is great and
every Saturday they have a nature walk for kids behind the
clubhouse.
For every hundred bucks I make, I set aside five for
Bernie's stone.
What do you write on something like that? LIFE PASSED
HER BY? DIED DISAPPOINTED? CAME BACK TO LIFE BUT FELL APART? All true, but too
sad, and no way I'm writing any of those.
BERNIE KOWALSKI, it's going
to say: BELOVED AUNT.
Sometimes she comes to me in dreams. She never
looks good. Sometimes she's wearing a dirty smock. Once she had on handcuffs.
Once she was naked and dirty and this mean cat was clawing its way up her front.
But every time it's the same thing.
"Some people get everything and I
got nothing," she says. "Why? Why did that happen?"
Every time I say I
don't know.
And I don't.
[The End]
appears in the short story collection Pastoralia
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