Authors: Chris Lynch
He dumped me, nude, on the sidewalk in front of the house, then went back inside without bothering to beat me. Felina whistled from the window, dropped my stuff down, and disappeared again. Three people walked by one at a time and none seemed to notice me dressing on the sidewalk.
I was at the O’Asis, my parents’ bar. I was supposed to be working, but I was sleeping at a table, holding my mop. The tapping at the front window woke me. It was really more of a porthole, and made of green bubble glass, so you couldn’t tell who was out there. I opened up anyway.
“Those the clothes you were wearing Saturday?” Sully asked, holding his nose. “Change before you go to school, will ya? And where did you sleep last night?”
I looked at my clothes, only now realizing that I’d been wearing them for two days straight. I wore them to bed when I set the house on fire, wore them to Felina’s, and put the same rags back on while standing on the sidewalk. All this while carrying several changes of fresh clothes right there in my bag.
“I didn’t sleep last night,” I said. “I had a lot of adrenaline, so I walked instead.” A smile came to me as I recalled it, where I got that adrenaline. Once again, I had lost track of the point, that it was Toy’s
mother
I was celebrating. Sully was a gift, showing up here, now. He was the only one I could tell, and I couldn’t wait.
“So, how was
your
weekend...?” I began slowly.
By the time I’d meandered my way to the point of the story, Sully’s mouth was hanging wide open. I reached over and closed it up for him.
“You did
what
?” he asked in a desperate whisper even though we were the only ones in the place.
“I—”
“You did
what
?”
“I said, I sl—”
“You did
what
? You did it with
who
?”
I let him answer himself now. All I could do at this point was giggle anyway.
“Jesus, Mick, what are you gonna do? I mean, congratulations and everything, but what are you gonna do?”
I held for a second, then exploded, jumped right up out of my chair. “I think I’ll... climb the Matterhorn, swim the English Channel, wrestle an alligator. ...”
“I think
that’s
gonna happen sooner than you think, bub.”
“I want to do it all. Today. C’mon, Sul, let’s go tip over some Subarus, right now.”
Finally, he caught some of my enthusiasm as I flailed around, dancing with my mop as I cleaned the floor. Sully lightened up some, but still he was concerned.
“Ya, maybe we can tip a couple on the way to school, but we have to get going. To
school
. You remember school, dontcha, studley?”
I started mopping much more slowly as things began coming back to me. Damn, school. School seemed so... small now. Then something bigger occurred to me. Where do I go
after
school? I’d traveled a million miles the last couple of days and come back to find the same old problems, only worse.
Now it was my turn. “What am I gonna do, Sul?”
He walked to me, took my mop away. “First, you’re gonna change your clothes.”
“But I mean later. Where am I gonna go?”
“You’re gonna come home with me, right?”
“What’s that, a joke? You gotta know what happened.”
“Ya, I know,” Sully said, picking up the mopping where I’d left off. “But he said you could come back.”
I had already half stripped, and was pulling fresh clothes out of my bag behind the bar. “Your dad? He said I could come back?”
Sully waved me off like I didn’t know anything, which was turning out to be pretty true. “He ain’t nowhere near as mean as he makes out. As a matter of fact, he said he never actually threw you out in the first place. He was just a little angry about you burnin’ his house, went downstairs to get his gun, and when he came back you were gone.”
I was at the sink, splashing water into my armpits. “Jeez, sounds like I overreacted then, huh?”
“Ah, he wouldn’t’ve shot ya. Just woulda waved it around and yelled a little,” Sully laughed. Then he got a shade more serious. “Truth is, you owe me for this one.
I
got him to let you back. I kicked his ass. ...”
“Excuse me?”
“Did I say kicked? Sorry, I meant kissed. I kissed his ass to let you back. And it tasted like shit, too, so you better appreciate it.”
I did. And he knew I did, so I kept my back to him, stayed at the sink washing and grinning to myself. This may have been the only thing that could have pushed Felina out of my mind for a minute. Sleeping back at the Sullivans’ again was suddenly more exciting than sleeping anywhere, with anyone, else.
“The kicker is that you don’t have your own place anymore, Mick. You’re banned from the attic. Gotta stay with me now. That okay?”
This time I turned around dressed and somewhat cleaned. “Ya, Sul,” I said. “That okay.”
“Cool. Listen, we’re gonna be late, so let’s wrap it up. What’s left to do?”
I pointed to a bucket of rags and Tilex, then pointed to the bathroom. “You do in there. I have to scrape the floor back here.”
Bravely, Sully went into the bathroom. There was a three-second beat, and he came back out again, gasping. “Oh
my god
,” he said, marching behind the bar and handing me the bucket. We switched jobs. “One of these days you’ve got to stop shittin’ on me, Mick,” he grumbled.
By the time we got to school, Sully had relaxed. But now I was tense.
“Somebody’s
mother,
Mick?”
“Shut up.”
“Okay, let me put it another way:
Somebody’s
mother.”
It was an excellent point. Toy wasn’t just big, and tough, and a pretty serious guy. There was something unknown about him, that you didn’t
need
to know, to realize you didn’t want him mad at you. And there was the other thing, the rightness of him. You knew he’d never do something like that to somebody else’s mother, and that was what stung even more.
I swallowed hard, a loud gulping swallow. I had to just go about my business, like any other school day, that’s all there was to it.
Automatically, I went to Evelyn’s homeroom and waited outside for her.
“This one too, Mick?” Sully said, gesturing inside to where Evelyn was already seated. “Jeez, once you start, you’re an animal, aren’t ya?”
He was just a buzzing in my ear as I stared at Evelyn from the side. She looked neat and proper and all smart again, as far away from me as she was back at the beginning. I felt a huge acidy hollowness spreading in me as I watched her, and I felt stupid for being there. She must have felt me watching, because then she turned.
As Evelyn got up and came my way, Sully moved away at the same speed, as if they were two opposite magnets.
“Hello,” she said.
“Hello,” I said, thinking this was a nice start.
She shook her head. “How do you feel? Are you sick at all?”
I toggled my head around, taking stock, getting a feel for myself. “No, I’m okay. Thank you for asking.”
“That’s good. I have to go to class now.”
“Wait,” I said. “Ah, about that y’know, mistake I made...”
“That’s far enough, Mick,” she said. “We don’t have to have this talk. You’re a decent enough guy, I think, way down in there somewhere. But you have a lot of work to do. You have...
problemas. Tu sabes?
We’re not talking about a mistake. We’re talking about things that are deep in you. As of right now, we’re not quite right for each other. Maybe later. Okay?”
She reached out and grabbed my hand, pulling the fingers apart like breaking a wishbone. I hardly felt it.
“Mick? Mick, your face doesn’t show me anything. Are you okay?”
“I’m okay,” I said, though I wasn’t. This should not have hurt me at this point, should not have surprised me. But it did, and it did.
She seemed, from her expression, as if I had spooked her. She waved Sully to come and get me. “You’ll be fine,” she said as Sully came up from behind and grabbed my shoulder. “Summer is almost here, and that’s going to be a new world. The summer is refreshing, the summer is hope. You never know, with the summer. We’ll see, Mick, okay?”
Somehow, through the powerful weirdness of my confusion, I had turned her. Sully was ushering me away and Evelyn was staying there in the hallway, talking to me. “You just take it easy, Mick. Let’s take it as it comes, all right? We’ll talk. You rest. Summer will be good.”
Sully pushed me down into my seat. “Well, that went well,” he said. As soon as I sat down, the bell rang to get up. Eight thirty, and I was already totally wiped out.
I managed not to see Toy until lunchtime. When I did, as he approached my table in the caf with that long, slow stride, I heard something build like a tympani drum roll in my ears. It was my heart.
“Hey,” he said as he sat across from me and Sul. I said hey, then stuck a spoon in my mouth and started chewing it. At least it would keep me from swallowing my tongue. Toy stared down at me. I couldn’t see the eyes. I knew the angle of the hat by now, and the stare was withering me. Sully kept kicking my ankle, for laughs.
“My old lady said you were looking for me,” Toy said.
“Ya, I was, lookin’, I was lookin’, lookin’ for ya, Toy, I was lookin’,” I babbled, the spoon still in there.
Sully decided to help me out.
“So, how
is
your mom, Toy?”
“She’s none of your damn business, Sullivan. Thank you for asking.”
Sully didn’t help me anymore.
“Your date didn’t work out so well,” Toy said.
“Huh?” My hands were shaking, so I sat on them. My eyes were about to spill with fear tears.
“Your date. I heard about it. You went down in flames with Evelyn. Sorry to hear it. You, ah, regressed, I believe.”
I nodded. Nodded involuntarily with my whole jangly body.
“Are you sick?” Toy asked, tilting his head to get a better look. I shrugged.
“Anyway, you wanted to talk to me.”
“C-c-can we do it later, Toy?” I asked, excusing myself from the table.
“Not a problem,” was the last thing I heard before I fell. My knees buckled, my legs all water from nervous exhaustion. Toy rushed over just ahead of Sully to pick me up.
“I’m okay, I’m okay,” I said, and Toy let me go. “I think I’m gonna go see the nurse. Sully, you want to take me home?”
“I’ll catch up with you later,” Toy said, and it sounded to me like a line from an old gangster movie.
Sully hopped up enthusiastically, taking me by my elbow like I was an old person. I shook it off, he grabbed it again. I shook it off, he grabbed it again, laughing. “Finally,” he said, “finally, I get to see a benefit from being your caretaker.”
T
HE SULLIVANS SEEMED TO
like me better after I burned their house. They really adopted me after that. Anyway, I didn’t actually burn the place, just the one wall in the one room. My room. But not anymore.
I still spent a lot of time there, though. Every chance I got, slithering up the stairs to just sit on the floor and stare out the dormer window, kind of like a private church thing for myself.
“Yo, Buddha, you comin’ down to eat?” Sully called from the bottom of the stairs.
I pulled myself away reluctantly. I could stay up there for hours, pretending it was still mine, but I couldn’t miss meals with the Sullivans.
“I still don’t get this, Sully. Why am I treated better around here now?”
“It’s my mother. She can’t resist a cripple. She’s always putting up stray animals and loser relatives for weeks at a time. Every year on Labor Day, she gives, like, thousands of bucks to Jerry Lewis, the whole weekend, just keeps calling back and pledging more and more, until Dad has to yank her out to a movie and dinner. She’s a sucker, big heart stuff.”
Though there didn’t quite seem to be a compliment for me buried in there anywhere, I liked the explanation anyway. I could fill the injured animal role, if someone really wanted to fix me. I ate with them, like I did every night now, listening to small talk about people I mostly didn’t know. I listened to Mr. Sullivan rail on about all the idiots in the world, including, in great detail, my own family and myself, as if I wasn’t right there to hear it. He just didn’t care, which I admired.
Pot roast, mushy soft potatoes and carrots in cocoa-brown gravy. When I finished working my bread, you could have put the dish right back in the cupboard, it was so clean.
“Ah, clean plate club,” Mrs. Sullivan chirped.
“Duh, Ma,” Sully said.
I laughed. How stupid, how wonderful.
I went with the whole family into the living room. Mrs. Sullivan sat at one end of the couch. I sat next to her. Sully rushed up, wedged himself between us.
“You stay away from my mother, you animal,” he whispered in my ear.
“You are so low,” I said.
“What?” Mrs. Sullivan asked, smiling, as if this was a joke she would actually like to be let in on. I just shook my head.
Mr. Sullivan stretched out on the floor, flipped on the TV. “You’re in for a treat, Mick. It’s a very special cinematic event we’re going to be sharing with you here.”
The three of them started laughing at once. I was lost. Felt kind of eerie.
The film came on.
The Fighting Sullivans
. It was a based-on-fact World War II movie about five brothers who served on the same ship in the navy. In the end they all croak together except one.
“We always fight ta-gedda. We always fight ta-gedda,” Sully squawked, mimicking a character from the movie.
“A
giant
of a film,” Mr. Sullivan crowed. Within sixty seconds, he was snoring.
The movie was hysterically sappy and lame, but that wasn’t the point. They’d obviously done this a thousand times before, Sully trading off with his mother, spouting dialogue and laughing, Mr. Sullivan even wafting in and out of consciousness for the occasional remembered line. I watched them all as much as I did the movie, sneaking long looks at the sides of their faces. An hour into the movie, Mrs. Sullivan joined her husband in sleep, her face resting lightly in her palm, her elbow propped on the sofa arm.
Sully looked at me, which he hadn’t done until we were alone. “Goofy, huh?”