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Dead Boys: Stories (Page 3 of 9) Cassie buries her face in her mother's thigh. Her older sister, Kendra, who's eight, doesn't look up from the coloring book she's working on. It's been almost a week since Tracy was attacked, and she still has an ugly greenish bruise on her cheek and broken blood vessels in one eye. She herds us into the living room, asking what we want to drink. The place smells like food, something familiar. "Cabbage rolls," Tracy says. "You loved Mom's." "So how are you?" I ask. That's broad enough in front of the kids. "Better every day, which is how it goes, they say. There are experts and things, counselors. It's amazing." "You see it on TV, on those shows. I bet it helps. I mean, does it?" | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
"Oh, yeah. Sure. Time's the main thing, though." "Come sit with me," Liz says to Cassie. She's trying to draw her out of Tracy's lap, give Mommy a break. "No," Cassie whines as she wraps her arms tighter around Tracy's neck. My beer tastes funny. I hold the can to my ear and shake it. This big brother business is new to me. Tracy and I have never been close. We were in different worlds as kids, and since our parents died we've seen each other maybe twice a year. She came back from Hawaii, settled in San Diego, and met Tony. They married in Vegas without telling anyone. Whew! I thought. I'm finally off the hook. But Tony's been gone six months now. Tracy used star 69 to catch him cheating. He was that stupid, or maybe he wanted to be caught. I notice that some of the furniture is different, new but cheaper. The couch used to be leather. Tony took his share when he left. Everything had to be negotiated. Tracy got to keep the kids' beds, and he got the TV, a guy who makes a hundred grand a year. It's been downhill since then. Battle after battle. "You owe me a hug," I say to Kendra. "I sent you that postcard from Florida." Exasperated, she slaps down her crayon and marches over. We scared the hell out of her when she was younger, showing up one Halloween dressed in a cow costume, Liz in the front half, me in back. She'll never trust me again. She grimaces when I pull her up onto the couch. "What's the deal?" I ask. "What?" "What's shaking? What's new? How's school?" "It's okay, but my teacher's too old. She screamed at us the other day, like, 'Shut up! Shut up!' " She has to scream, too, to show me how it went. "Kendra!" Tracy says. Cassie sees her sister getting attention and decides that she wants some. She leaves her mother to pick up a stuffed pig, which she brings to Liz, who soon has both girls laughing by giving the pig a lisp and making it beg for marshmallows and ketchup. There's a creepy picture of an angel on the wall. I ask Tracy what that's about. We weren't raised religious. We weren't raised anything at all. "It was Kendra's idea. We saw it at the mall, and she was like, 'Mommy, Mommy, we need that.' " Tracy shrugs and shakes her head. Her fingers go to the bruise on her cheek. She taps it rhythmically. "Angels, huh," I say to Kendra. "They watch us all the time and keep us safe." "Who taught you that?" "Leave me alone," she snaps. I walk into the kitchen with my empty beer can. Everything shines like it's brand- new. Our mother would wake up at four in the morning sometimes and pull every pot and pan we owned out of the cupboards and wash them. Dad called it her therapy, but that's bullshit. She'd be cursing under her breath as she scrubbed, and her eyes were full of rage. Something is burning. I smell it. The fire must be closer than it seemed. I press my face to the window, trying to see the sky, while the girls laugh at another of Auntie Liz's jokes. Ash drifts down like the lightest of snowfalls, disappearing as soon as it touches the ground. It sticks to the hood of a black Explorer, and more floats on the surface of the development's swimming pool, where the girls are splashing with Liz. The sun forces woozy red light through the smoke, and it feels later than it is. I tug at the crotch of my borrowed bathing suit, one thing Tony left behind. My sister sits beside me in a chaise, fully clothed, to hide more bruises, I bet. The rapist got her as she was leaving a restaurant. That's all she told me. In a parking garage. That's all I know. "I'm lucky he didn't kill me," she said afterward. Her hand shakes when she adjusts her sunglasses; the pages of her magazine rattle. "Come swim with us, Uncle Jack," Kendra calls. She can paddle across the deep end by herself, while Cassie, wearing inflatable water wings, sits on the stairs, in up to her waist. I make a big production of gearing up for my cannonball, stopping short a number of times until they are screaming for me to jump, jump, jump.
Copyright © 2007 by Richard Lange About the Author Richard Lange was born in Oakland, CA, in 1961 and spent his childhood in various small towns in California's Central Valley. He moved to Los Angeles at 17 to attend film school at the University of Southern California. While there, he took fiction writing courses taught by T.C. Boyle and was awarded the Ed Moses Fiction Writing Grant two years running. He also worked 32 hours a week at a supermarket in order to pay for costs his scholarship didn't cover and feels that he learned as much there as he did in school. More by Richard Lange |
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