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Authors: John Schulian

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BOOK: A Better Goodbye
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Sierra never noticed when Nick eased toward the guest bedroom. He stayed there until he was sure both girls were gone without a goodbye. His gut told him Ling wouldn't be back. It happened all the time, some girls crying, some pissed off, some just screwed up, but he still wasn't right with it.

He parked on the freeway side of Beloit, where he could always find a space next to the rusting wire fence. Maybe the people who left the spaces empty were afraid the branches that fell off the eucalyptus trees would hit their cars. It was the kind of thing Nick didn't worry about. His pickup was so dinged up that a few more dents wouldn't hurt it.

As he started toward his apartment, he saw two of the Mexicans from next door trying to lift something large and ungainly into the back of their rattletrap truck. It looked like a contraption for aerating lawns; he'd driven one the summer after he dropped out of high school, working on a golf course and getting the roughest ride he'd ever had. The damned thing felt like it weighed a ton back then, and it didn't appear to have gotten any lighter. The Mexicans, just skinny kids really, didn't have a prayer in hell of getting it up where they wanted it to go.

Nick thought of the kids' two bosses already inside kicking back with cold
cerveza
and walked over to see if he could help. “You need a couple boards,” he told the kids. “Then you can run that thing up in there easy.”

They looked at him, uncomprehending, and dropped the machine, laughing self-consciously when its handle banged into the grill of the dirty Ford Taurus behind them. Okay, so there wouldn't have been room for the boards even if they had them.

After that, Nick didn't bother asking if they
se habla
'd English, he just grabbed hold of the aerator and waited for them to realize he was willing to lend some muscle. The kids looked at each other, grinning and chattering in Spanish. One of the few words he understood was
pendejo.
Okay, they thought he was a sucker. But he didn't let go of the aerator, and soon enough the kids got the message: three was better than two when it came to wrestling this big son of a bitch.

The kids stepped up to the aerator, Nick counted off—“
Uno, dos, tres
”—and they lifted. Nick could hear them grunt with effort, and he felt them wobble, but when they saw the gringo doing his share and more minus the bullshit, they found the little extra it took to get the aerator onto the truck bed. The kids clambered after it to tie it down while Nick savored the blood surging through his muscles. It reminded him of the way he used to feel after sparring.


Gracias
,” one of the kids said. He and his buddy were back on the street now, still smiling, and his buddy was offering Nick a can of Tecate.

It was warm, but Nick accepted it with a
gracias
of his own, then gave them a little salute with the can and headed down the narrow, overgrown walk to his apartment. He would damned sure drink the beer once it had spent some time in his fridge and he had taken a shower. But his plans went on hold when he opened his door to the sound of a ringing phone.

He answered it before he turned on a light, and heard Cecil saying, “About damn time. Where you been? I keep leavin' messages you never answer.”

“My answering machine's been screwed up,” Nick said.

“Bullshit. You been duckin' me.”

Cecil had heard Nick lie before, about how he felt between rounds, about whether he was doing his roadwork, about all the things fighters lie about. The lies hadn't worked then either.

Nick couldn't help laughing. “Come on, Cecil, let me get away with something, would you?”

“Too late to start that shit.”

Nick knew Cecil well enough to know he was smiling. Not a big smile, just this little thing he did with the right side of his mouth.

“How you been?” Nick asked. “You doing all right?”

“Gettin' old, that's how I'm doing,” Cecil said. “You wanna hear me complain, I'll buy you another dinner next time I'm in town. I like an audience.”

“All you got to do is call.”

“Now you startin' with the bullshit again.”

“Give me a break, would you? I been busy.”

“Doin' what?”

“I found a job,” Nick said. “Maintenance. In an apartment building.”

“That right?” Cecil asked. “Who you working for?”

“You know the guy. You gave me his number.”

“Maintenance, huh?”

“They didn't have an opening for president,” Nick said, worried that Cecil's radar had picked up another lie.

“My neighbor's boy working with you?” Cecil asked.

“Someone from Vegas? Not that I know of.”

“My neighbor in the 'Shaw.” Cecil sounded agitated, the way he used to get when Nick didn't stick and move. “DuPree.”

It took a moment for Nick to realize Cecil was talking about the guy Scott had brought around the apartment, the one who had mad-dogged him and maybe hurt that girl Hanna. The hard-on with the ex-con stare.

“Oh, yeah, I met the guy,” Nick said. “Hangs out with my boss. But he's not working there.”

“Don't be bullshittin' me,” Cecil said, surprising Nick with the sharpness of his tone.

“What the hell, Cecil? You pissed off because I didn't call and say thanks, I got a job because of you? Then I'm sorry, all right? I apologize. I'm grateful for the help, you know I am. But jump back, would you?”

Cecil wouldn't. “Been botherin' my ass since I give you that number,” he said. “I don't want you havin' nothing to do with that boy DuPree. You hear me? Nothing.”

“What's the problem?”

“He's evil.”

“How about we split the difference and call him an asshole?”

“You ain't hearin' me,” Cecil said. “This muthafucka's a criminal. You give him half a reason and he will put you in the ground.”

“If he tries,” Nick said, “he better bring a big shovel.”

18

The morning of her first shift, hours before she had to make the short drive to Ashton Avenue, Jenny kept wondering if there was a genetic explanation for the life she was going back to. Her mother had used her body as a means of survival too, although the circumstances in her case had been far more extreme, maybe even life threatening. She had nothing else at her disposal, poor Eun-Chu Yee, abandoned in Seoul by the farm boy who got her pregnant with Jenny and beaten by the sweet-faced GI who took her for a wife and brought her to America.

He beat her there as well, on the ragged lawn of an apartment complex in Downey, a blue-collar refuge obscured by the glare of L.A.'s glamour. Her screams cut through the hum of traffic on the 605, but not until years later did Jenny learn about the miscarriage and the little sister who was never born.

Eun-Chu Yee was brave to talk about such things, brave in a way Jenny couldn't be about the GI who had sneaked into her bed to touch her and make her touch him. Jenny had always imagined that he went straight from one of their forlorn assignations to the strip club where he found her mother a job. He was leaving for a post in Germany, and he wanted to make sure the two of them could get by without any help from him. What he didn't count on Eun-Chu finding in that cinderblock fleshpot was the power she held over men.

Maybe the source of it lay in her sculpted cheekbones and sumptuous breasts, or the shimmering hair that flowed to her waist until she decided it was boring and chopped it off. Even then, shorn to the ears, eyes gleaming at the shock she inspired, that self-made gamine looked better, sexier, more intriguing than any woman Jenny had ever seen. But there was more to her mother's impact on men than the desire she stirred in them, and it was written in her impetuousness.

Eun-Chu Yee was a creature of impulse, forever embracing a new enthusiasm and then dropping it in a heartbeat for the next one. Jenny suspected it was that way with men, too. She had seen the parade through the tumbledown places where they lived, the broken-walled apartments and converted garages where she learned to hate the smell of kimchi and picked up the physical mess in her mother's wake. The psychological mess was for Eun-Chu Yee to handle on her own, no matter how limited her resources.

The only break she got was named Dailey Watkins. Jenny thought her mother had met him in the club where she danced, as if that mattered, as if you think less of an oak tree because it grows in a junkyard. Dailey's black skin scared Jenny at first. It was, she thought, an understandable reaction after the way black GI brats had bullied her in Korea and black school kids had welcomed her to the States by mocking her slanted eyes. But if Dailey sensed her fear, he said nothing, preferring to win her with his laughter and the offer of his hand to hold. “You one more princess, ain't you?” he said. “Just like your mama.” And he won her heart, just like he'd won her mother's.

They lived in Long Beach, in the house on Obispo Avenue where he had taken them, its flower beds perfectly tended, its stucco walls painted just so. He never complained about the kimchi and he said he loved Korean barbecue as much as he did the ribs he brought home from Compton. Jenny believed every word because she had watched him in the yard with her mother, cutting roses to put in a vase, and she had seen how he stroked her mother's hair. There was something approaching reverence in that simple gesture, something that crystallized the love Eun-Chu Yee had done without for so long.

She had a year to treasure it, and then it was gone, stolen from her by the accident that killed Dailey on the construction site where he was working. “He was the man God sent me to love,” she told Jenny. And what was there to say after that except goodbye to the security he had given them? They were princesses no more, thrust back into a life of drifting and jobs that Eun-Chu Yee never discussed. Jobs in hostess bars, Jenny guessed. More jobs stripping. And with them came men introduced by only their first names, men who craved her mother's beauty and mocked her broken English, men with beer and liquor and Polaroid cameras who would take her mother into the bedroom after she had posed for them wearing nothing but a stunned smile, her legs spread wide.

It should have been a relief when she found religion, but the transformation only produced another kind of madness. Every mundane act, every conversation, every breath seemed to evoke a burst of praise for the Holy Trinity that Jenny's mother had somehow reduced to two, “the God and the Jesus.” Jenny couldn't bring friends home for fear they would be sermonized, proselytized, anesthetized. She was hardly able to bear the thought of going home herself until her mother backslid into more booze and rump shaking.

Saturday night had triumphed over Sunday morning, and Jenny felt like celebrating until the police woke her with the news that Eun-Chu Yee had died in a one-car crash with only a bottle of cheap Scotch for company. Jenny was sixteen when she was thrown into the survival test called life, and now it was six years later and she was wiping away tears she hadn't expected to cry. They were all she had to offer the memory of her mother, unless she wanted to include her new job. Her mother might not have approved of it, but she certainly would have understood. Maybe it really was genetics.

Okay, a little lipstick, a little blush. Forget about Elizabeth Bishop and prepare to get naked.
La-la-la-la, la-la
,
la
: just like that, she was Coco. It was easy for Jenny to make the transformation because life became so uncomplicated when she turned herself into this fantasy creature who existed solely for sex. All she had to do was laugh and be pretty and she was insulated from real life.

When she showed up for her first day in Scott's harem, she would have sworn she could feel a change, but maybe it was the new thong she was wearing. She rang the apartment from downstairs and a man answered.
Must be the security guy,
she told herself, and didn't give him another thought until he opened the door to 824 for her.

“You're early,” he said.

BOOK: A Better Goodbye
3.95Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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