In the Path of Falling Objects (2 page)

BOOK: In the Path of Falling Objects
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There was a door there, hanging open, but it was bent badly, and so I kicked at it until it finally wedged into the jambs and stopped the pounding rain from coming in.

“What if we can’t get out?” Simon said.

“It’ll open.”

The rain was so loud inside the small trailer, roaring like an endless swarm of locusts hurling themselves against the rusted skin of its exterior. When the thunder came, the trailer seemed to lift in the air, and we both nearly fell down from it.

But there was enough light coming in through the two side windows that we could see where we were. A bed stretched across the width of the trailer in the back, the uncovered mattress yellowed and torn, offering up tufts of its innards where the cloth had worn through. And smeared all along the yellowing walls were handprints, stamped in the red dirt of the desert, probably made from someone
drying themselves here during a rainfall like this one. I put the pack on what was left of a table, attached to one wall, but broken jaggedly across its middle as though bitten by some giant.

I opened the pack.

“It’s still dry. We should put on some dry clothes, Simon.”

“It stinks like piss in here.”

“Least we’re not out there.”

We changed our clothes, leaving our wet things hanging wherever we could; from the splinters of the broken table, the knob of the door, the edge of the window; our shoes turned upside down at the upper edge of the floor where there wasn’t any water. I pulled a tee shirt from the pack but it was Simon’s, so I sighed and put it back. My nose was running, water dripped from my hair, and I realized I had nothing else dry to wear in the pack besides some underwear and one pair of jeans that were too big for me. I took out Matthew’s letters and stacked them flat. Standing barefoot in the rusted water on the floor, I tossed a pair of socks to Simon, who had climbed up onto the bed.

“These are your socks,” Simon said, putting them down, ignored, on the torn bedding.

“Wear them anyway.”

I left the pack on the table and placed the bundle of Matthew’s letters down on the bed next to Simon’s feet. My brother scooted himself back and sat up against the rear wall.

Simon was fourteen then. He stood so close to me in size that people who didn’t know us usually thought we were twins. So he was the unlucky third step in the clothes chain at our house, and that meant that, except for the shoes, his were almost always too small for him.

I liked to read. I liked drawing. But Simon liked everything physical, and was good at sports and made friends easier than I ever did.
Neither of us had cut our hair in months. We were both smart enough to know that back home we didn’t live like other kids. Our mother was always gone, always going to church, and I believed she was embarrassed to be seen with us. Whenever she needed Simon to do something, she’d tell me, like I was some kind of translator or something, or like she couldn’t even see him. I know I’d tried to protect him, growing up, and Simon could tell I was doing it, so he’d push back at me, and I’d fight, but I’d never give up on Simon.

And we were smart enough to know we had to stay close. Still, we both played at the game of pretending how opposite we could be; and so it was probably all we could do to tolerate one another as we tried to get somewhere together and alone out on that road. I wondered whether our frail peace would last.

I stood there, my feet cool in the stained water on that peeling floor, listening to the roar of rain, feeling the drips from my hair on my bare shoulders, just watching my little brother act so comfortable as he stretched out across the bed. I pulled my wet hair back and twisted it around into a tail.

The last time we had eaten anything was the day before we left. But we agreed to a rule, Brothers’ Rule Number One, that neither of us would ever say he was hungry.

Below the edge of the carcass of the bed, a
Time
magazine sat atop the castings-off of previous tenants, splayed open with curled and desiccated pages. I picked up the magazine, closing it so I could see the cover, moved Matthew’s letters to the side, and climbed up onto the bed next to Simon.

“No one’s been here for a while, Simon. This is from last October.”

I showed the magazine to Simon, who looked at it blankly, shrugging. The cover showed a checkerboard of square pictures, each alternating between the same repeated black-and-white image of
President Richard Nixon sandwiched between color photographs from the war in Vietnam; all of this beneath the banner
WHAT IF WE JUST PULL OUT?

“Well, they could have left it a little nicer in here.”

The rain continued to roar its drumming on the shell of the trailer.

I thumbed through the magazine. It was like a gift to have found something to read.

“Even if the rain stops soon, maybe we should just stay here for the night and then leave in the morning.”

“And then where will we go?” Simon said.

“We already said we’d do this.” I sighed. “Dad gets out in two weeks. He’s all we got. We should be there.”

Our father had been in and out of jail so much that I don’t think either of us really could picture what he looked like. This time he was in prison in Arizona. That’s what happens to heroin addicts. I guess it’s one way of getting clean. Simon and I didn’t talk about him much, but now that I look back on what happened to us that summer, maybe it was stupid of me to hold out any hope for things working out for us.

“You’re insane, Jonah.”

“What else can we do? We got ten dollars between us, and you know that any day they’d be coming to take us away. And most likely we’d end up separated. Then we’d have nothing left.”

I had a ten-dollar bill in our pack. I won it months before from a poster contest at school and kept it hidden away, not ever telling anyone it was there, taking it out from time to time to secretly stare at it. Now it was just one of the things we carried or wore that belonged to the small list of everything we owned in the world.

Simon didn’t say anything to that. He just sank down lower in his seat on the bed.

I read.

I heard Simon yawn.

“Do you hate her, too?” he asked.

I knew who Simon was talking about. Mother.

“Not really.”

“She must hate us,” Simon said.

“She does. I think so.”

“Why?”

“ ’Cause we pinned her down there. And she wasn’t good at it, so she just quit. That’s all. Then Matthew,” I said.

The rain pounded, making an angry noise.

“Really?”

“Yeah.”

“And you still don’t hate her?” Simon said.

“I gave up.”

“When you gonna give up on this?” Simon asked. “On me, I mean?”

“Not gonna. So let’s not talk about it anymore.”

“Brothers’ Rule Number Two,” Simon said. “Don’t be a quitter.”

“Are you making that one up mostly for you or for me?”

Simon didn’t answer that.

Thunder.

I listened.

And I said, “Sometimes when it rains like this it makes me feel like it’s never going to stop. Like the world’s coming to an end.”

 

Dear Joneser
,

I got my orders today and I’m going to be leaving on the 25
th
of this month. They’re going to send me to Oakland and then I’ll find out where I’m going for sure. Maybe they’ll just leave me in Oakland (ha ha).

I’m really tired. I wrote four letters before this one, but I didn’t want to forget my little brother. I should get some sleep I guess.

Hey.

There’s a flight line of choppers outside my window, if you could call it a window. When they’re taking off at night and in the day, it’s a beautiful sight. They fly right over our window about 15 to 20 feet up. You would love to see that and hear it.

I thought it was funny how you said not to write to Mother till after September cause Dad might get out of jail then, and how Simon just said for me to not get killed. I will try. But you and me know why Dad keeps getting himself put in jail. Don’t say anything to Simon.

Good night.

Love
,

Matt

I never liked my name, so Matthew always called me Joneser or Brother Jones or something like that.

I liked how he did that. Everyone else just called me
Jonah
.

Simon fell to sleep, propped up against the wall at the back of the trailer, his head tilted over and his body leaned sideways. Eventually he slumped over and his head fell down onto my shoulder. At first I was going to push him off—he’d have done it to me—but I stopped myself and sighed.

I felt like crying. I guess I felt like giving up.

But Simon laid down a rule and if I broke it, that would be like letting him beat me in a fight.

The rain ended quietly before night came.

I fell to sleep.

Simon was already awake when I opened my eyes. It was late in the morning and the air in the trailer was becoming hot and thick when
I heard the soft rubbery thud of something dropping down from the ceiling and hitting the floor below the edge of the bed where we had slept. Then came the scraping-clicking of movement of legs along the linoleum.

“There’s a big scorpion over there under that trash, Jonah.”

It didn’t really register. I sat up, letting my feet down onto the floor, and then, realizing what Simon had said, lifted them back up onto the bed.

“What did you say?”

“I saw a scorpion crawl under that trash there.” Simon nodded his chin to show the direction, across the floor, the trash piled up on the other side of the doorway.

“It’s really hot in here,” I said.

“I think it’s late.”

I looked down at the floor once more, then swallowed and put my feet down and stood. I felt surrounded by an empire of angry and poisonous bugs, all hiding, watching, waiting to attack. I opened my pack with two fingers, and peered inside to be sure there was nothing alive there. I saw the shine of the pistol’s barrel and the rest of our tangled clothes on the bottom, beneath the canteen. I shook out my shoes and slipped my bare feet into them, then cuffed my jeans and tiptoed to the door. When I tried to open it, the knob came right off in my hand and I nearly fell down, backwards, right on the spot where the scorpion was hiding.

“I told you you wouldn’t be able to get that open,” Simon complained. “Now what are we going to do?”

Sometimes, just the way he said things could make me so mad, and at that moment I wanted to throw that useless metal knob right at his head. But I knew I had to do everything I could to avoid fighting with Simon out on the road, even if he was always pushing at me. We didn’t make a rule about it, but I think we both knew we didn’t have to say it.

So I took a slow breath and bent to line my eye up with the rotten cavity where the doorknob had been attached. I poked a finger into the grease and rust of the hole, pushing and twisting at what was there, but nothing moved, and the door remained wedged tight.

Simon sat up, pulling straight the dingy tee shirt that had wound around him in his sleep. He was wearing my socks, and from the scattered and muddied papers on the floor he carefully picked his shoes, looking into them and shaking them out before slipping them loosely onto his feet.

I kicked the bottom of the door as hard as I could, denting its tin paneling and causing the top to buckle just a crack. It hurt my foot. I was hot, and so frustrated I wanted to scream.

“You’re stupid,” Simon said, goading.

And the scorpion emerged, flattening its yellow-brown body beside my foot. I jumped and stamped my heel across its abdomen, sending a spray of thick white slime several inches out on the floor. The stinger twitched and curled like a beckoning finger. I kicked the door again and raised my hand to punch it, but stopped myself. I didn’t want to look at Simon. I know I would have hit him if he said anything to me; even—especially—if he said “nice job.”

Sweating now, I pried at the top of the door, bending it slightly, but it began cutting into my fingers and would not move. I just stood there, sweat dripping from my neck, running down my chest. I stared at my feet, at the dead thing on the floor next to me, my hair, untied, hanging like blinders so I didn’t have to look at Simon.

“We’ll have to bust the window,” I said.

“Do you want me to do it?”

He might as well have just called me
stupid
again.

I sighed. “I will.”

And it felt good to break something, to hear the sound, the release of the glass snapping and popping beneath my foot as I balanced
myself atop the splintered table, bracing with both hands pressed up against the smoke-yellowed ceiling of the trailer. I looked up and saw I’d left two sweat-grimed handprints over my head.

I thought maybe someday, someone would know I’d been here, even if they never knew who I was.

We gathered up the wet clothes we had taken off during the storm, and I threw them from the window, far enough so they would not land in the shards of glass on the ground below us.

Simon crawled out first, and I handed him the pack before following.

I brushed myself off and looked up at the sky, squinting, and judged that it was already nearly noon.

We walked out beyond the edge of the trailer’s shadow and began picking up our wet clothes.

“We should just leave those here,” Simon said, “they’re too wet to put in the pack.”

“I don’t have anything else to wear. Except for some underwear, it’s all your stuff in there now.”

“Well, why’d you give me your socks then?”

“ ’Cause I’m stupid.”

I stepped through brush, gathering our scattered clothes, shaking them out, draping them across the fold of the pack. I felt like an idiot. I stopped and let the pack fall to the ground, turning back to face my brother standing there in the shade of the crooked trailer.

“You left Matt’s letters in there, didn’t you?” Simon said.

And I didn’t say anything. I just left the pack there in the dirt and walked back to the trailer, and boosted myself up on the naked wheel hub so I could squeeze my way back into the opening of the broken window. I felt the sting of a small cut on my belly when it raked across a tooth of glass. I climbed back into the hot trailer, watched as the blood slowly trickled, thick and dark, staining the
top of my jeans. I wiped it away with a rust-stained palm and pressed against the cut to stop the bleeding. It didn’t hurt too bad.

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