We Live in Water

Read We Live in Water Online

Authors: Jess Walter

Tags: #General Fiction

BOOK: We Live in Water
13.67Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

We Live in Water

Stories

Jess Walter

Dedication

To Warren and Cal

Contents

Dedication

Anything Helps

We Live in Water

Thief

Can a Corn

Virgo

Helpless Little Things

Please

Don’t Eat Cat

The New Frontier

The Brakes

The Wolf and the Wild

Wheelbarrow Kings

Statistical Abstract for My Hometown of Spokane, Washington

Acknowledgments

About the Author

Also by Jess Walter

Copyright

About the Publisher

Anything Helps

BIT HATES
going to cardboard.

But he got tossed from the Jesus beds for drunk and sacrilege, and he’s got no other way to get money. So he’s up behind Frankie Doodle’s, flipping through broken-down produce boxes like an art buyer over a rack of paintings, and when he finds a piece without stains or writing he rips it down until it’s square. Then he walks to the Quik Stop, where the fat checker likes him. He flirts her out of a Magic Marker and a beefstick.

The beefstick he eats right away and cramps his gut. He sets the cardboard on the counter and writes carefully in block letters:
ANYTHING HELPS
. The checker says, You got good handwriting, Bit.

The best spot, where the freeway lets off next to Dicks, is taken by some chalker Bit’s never seen before: skinny, dirty pants, hollow eyes. The kid’s sign reads
HOMELESS HUNGRY
. Bit yells,
Homeless Hungry
? Dude, I
invented
Homeless Hungry. The kid just waves.

Bit walks on, west toward his other spot. There are a few others out, stupid crankers—faces stupid, signs stupid: some forty-year-old baker with
VIETNAM VET
, too dumb to know he wasn’t born yet, and a coke ghost with tiny writing—
Can You Help me feed My Children please
. They’re at stupid intersections, too, with synced lights so the cars never stop.

Bit’s headed to his unsynced corner—fewer cars, but at least they have to stop. Streamers off the freeway, working people, South Hill kids, ladies on their way to lunch. When he gets there he grabs the light pole and sits back against it, eyes down—nonthreatening, pathetic. It feels weird; more than a year since he’s had to do this. You think you’re through with some things.

He hears a window hum and gets up, walks to the car without making eye contact. Gets a buck. Thank you. Minute later, another car, another window, another buck. Bless you.

Good luck, the people always say.

For the next hour, it’s a tough go. Cars come off the hill, hit the light, stop, look, leave. A woman who looks at first like Julie glances over and mouths, I’m sorry. Bit mouths back: Me too. Most people stare straight ahead, avoid eye contact.

After a while a black car stops, and Bit stands. But when the windows come down it’s just some boys in ball caps. Worst kind of people are boys in ball caps. Bit should just be quiet, but—

You stinking fucking drunk.

Yeah, I get that sometimes.

Why don’t you get a job?

Good advice. Thanks.

A couple of nickels fly out the window and skitter against the curb; the boys yell some more. Bit waits until they drive away to get the nickels, carefully. He’s heard of kids heating coins with their cigarette lighters. But the nickels are cool to the touch. Bit sits against his pole. A slick creeps down his back.

Then a guy in a gold convertible Mercedes almost makes the light but has to slam on his brakes.

I think you could’ve made it, Bit says.

The guy looks him over. Says, You look healthy enough to work.

Thanks. So do you.

Let me guess—veteran?

Yep. War of 1812.

The guy laughs. Then what, you lost your house?

Misplaced it.

You’re a funny fucker. Hey, tell you what. I’ll give you twenty bucks if you tell me what you’re gonna buy with it.

The light changes but the guy just sits there. A car goes around. Bit shields his eyes from the sun.

You give me twenty bucks?

Yeah, but you can’t bullshit me. If I give you a twenty, honestly, what are you gonna get?

The new Harry Potter book.

You are one funny fucker.

Thanks. You too.

No. Tell me
exactly
what you’re going to drink or smoke or whatever, and I’ll give you twenty. But it’s gotta be the truth.

The truth. Why does everyone always want that? He looks at the guy in his gold convertible. Back at the Jesus Beds they’ll be gathering for group about now, trying to talk one another out of this very thing, this reverie, truth.

Vodka, Bit says, because it fucks you up fastest. I’ll get it at the store over on Second, whatever cheap stuff they got, plastic in case I drop it. And I’ll get a bag of nuts or pretzels. Something solid to shit later. Whatever money’s left—Bit’s mouth is dry—I’ll put in municipal bonds.

After the guy drives off, Bit looks down at the twenty-dollar bill in his hand. Maybe he is a Funny Fucker.

BIT SLIDES
the book forward.
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows
. What’s a hallow, anyway? he asks.

The clerk takes the book and runs it through the scanner. I guess it’s British for hollow. I don’t read those books.

I read the first one. It was pretty good. Bit looks around Auntie’s Bookstore: big and open, a few soft chairs between the rows of books. So what do
you
read?

Palahniuk. That’ll be twenty-eight fifty-six.

Bit whistles. Counts out the money and sets it on the counter. Shit, he thinks, seventy cents short.

The clerk has those big loopy earrings that stretch out your lobes. He moves his mouth as he counts the money.

How big are you gonna make those holes in your ears?

Maybe like quarter-size. Hey, you’re a little short. You got a discount card?

Bit pats himself down. Hmm. In my other pants.

Be right back, the kid says, and leaves with the book.

I’m kind of in a hurry, Bit says to the kid’s back.

He needs to stop by the Jesus Beds, although he knows Cater might not let him in. He likes Cater, in spite of the guy’s mean-Jesus rules and intense, mean-Jesus eyes. It’s a shame what happened, because Bit had been doing so good, going to group almost every day, working dinner shifts and in the yard. Cater has this pay system at the Jesus Beds, where you serve or clean or do yard work and get paid in these vouchers that you redeem for snacks and shit at the little store they run. Keeps everything kind of in-house and gets people used to spending their money on something other than getting fucked up. Of course, there’s a side market in the vouchers, dime on the dollar, so over time people save enough to get stewed, but Bit’s been keeping that under control, too, almost like a civilian. No crank for more than a year, just a beer or two once a month, occasionally a split bottle of wine.

Then last weekend happened. At group on Thursday, Fat Danny had been bragging again about the time he OD’d, and that made Bit think of Julie, the way her foot kept twitching after she stopped breathing, so after group he took a couple of bucks from his stash—the hollow rail of his bed—and had a beer. In a tavern. Like a real person, leaned up against the bar watching baseball. And it was great. Hell, he didn’t even drink all of it; it was more about the bar than the beer.

But it tasted so good he broke down on Friday and got two forties at the Quik Stop. And when he came back to the Jesus Beds, Wallace ran off to Cater and told him Bit sold his vouchers for booze money.

Consequences, Cater is always saying.

I feel shitty, Bit’s always saying.

Let’s talk about
you
, Andrea the social worker is always saying.

When you sober up come see me, the fat checker at the Quik Stop is always saying.

Funny fucker, the guy in the gold convertible is always saying.

The bookstore kid finally comes back. He’s got a little card, like a driver’s license, and he gives it to Bit with a pen. There, now you have a discount card, the kid says. On the little piece of cardboard, where it says
NAME
, Bit writes,
Funny Fucker
. Where it says
ADDRESS
, Bit writes:
Anything Helps
.

BIT STARTS
walking again, downtown along the river. For a while, he and Julie camped farther down the bank, where the water turns and flattens out. They’d smoke and she’d lie back and mumble about getting their shit together.

Bit tried to tell Cater that. Yes, he’d fucked up, but he’d actually been selling his vouchers to buy this book, to get his shit together. But Cater was suspicious, asked a bunch of questions, and then Wallace piped in with
He’s lying
and Bit lunged at Wallace and Cater pulled him off—rough about it, too—Bit yelling
Goddamn this
and
Goddamn that
, making it three-for-three (1. No drinking, 2. No fighting, 3. No taking the Lord’s etc.), so that Cater had no choice, he said, rules being rules.

Then I got no choice either, Bit said, pacing outside the Jesus Beds, pissed off.

Sure you do, Cater said. You always have a choice.

Of course, Cater was right. But out of spite or self-pity, or just thirst, Bit went and blew half his book money on a fifth, spent a couple of nights on the street and then shot the rest of his money on another. You think you’re through with some things, picking smokes off the street, shitting in alleys. He woke this morning in a parking lot above the river, behind a humming heat pump. Looked down at the river and could practically see Julie lying back in the grass.
When we gonna get our shit together, Wayne?

Bit walks past brick apartments and empty warehouses. Spokane’s a donut city, downtown a hole, civilians all in the suburbs.
Donut City
is part of Bit’s
unifying urban theory,
like the part about how every failing downtown tries the same stupid fixes: hang a vertical sign on an empty warehouse announcing
Luxury Lofts!
, buy buses that look like trolley cars, open a shitty farmers’ market.

Very interesting, Andrea says whenever Bit talks about his theory. But we talk about
ourselves
at group, Bit. Let’s talk about you.

But what if this
is
me? Bit asked once. Why can’t we be the things that we see and think? Why do we always have to be these sad stories, like Fat Danny pretending he’s sorry he screwed up his life when we all know he’s really just bragging about how much coke he used to do? Why can’t we talk about
what we think
instead of just all the stupid shit we’ve
done
?

Okay, Wayne, she said—what do you think?

I think I’ve done some real stupid shit.

Andrea likes him, always laughs at his jokes, treats him smarter than the group, which he is. She even flirts with him, a little.

Where’s your nickname come from? she asked him one time.

It’s because that’s all a woman can take of my wand, he said. Just a bit. Plus I chewed a man to death once. Bit right through his larynx.

It’s his last name is all, said Wallace. Bittinger.

That’s true, he said. Although I did bite a guy’s larynx once.

You think you’re so smart, Wallace is always saying.

And do you want to talk about Julie? Andrea is always saying.

Not so much, Bit’s always saying.

We’re all children before God, Cater is always saying.

But Cater isn’t even at the Jesus Beds when Bit stops there. He’s at his kid’s soccer game. Kenny the Intake Guy leans out the window and says he can’t let Bit in the door till he clears it with Cater.

Sure, Bit says, just do me a favor. He takes the book from the bag. Tell him I showed you this.

BIT WALKS
past brick storefronts and apartments, through nicer neighborhoods with green lawns. The book’s heavy under his arm.

Another part of Bit’s unifying urban theory is sprinklers, that you can gauge a neighborhood’s wealth by the way people water. If every single house has an automatic system, you’re looking at a six-figure mean. If the majority lug hoses around, it’s more lower-middle class. And if they don’t bother with the lawns . . . well, that’s the sort of shitburg where Bit and Julie always lived, except for that little place they rented in Wenatchee the summer Bit worked at the orchard. He sometimes thinks back to that place and imagines what it would be like if he could undo everything that came after that point, like standing up a line of dominos. All the way back to Nate.

Other books

African Gangbang Tour by Jenna Powers
La pista del Lobo by Juan Pan García
The Diamond Secret by Suzanne Weyn
The Sigma Protocol by Robert Ludlum
Tiopa Ki Lakota by D Jordan Redhawk
Helpless by Daniel Palmer
IM10 August Heat (2008) by Andrea Camilleri
The Edge of Normal by Carla Norton
Tell My Sorrows to the Stones by Christopher Golden, Christopher Golden