‘Vaine Gurie? She’s supposed to be on the Pritikin diet – Barry’ll have a truck!’
‘Good-night, she damn near lives at Bar-B-Chew Barn!’
‘Oh good Lord.’
‘Vernon’s in there, Pam,’ says Eileena. ‘You better wait outside.’
So the door flies open. Pam wobbles in, bolt upright like she has books on her head. It’s on account of her center of gravity. ‘Vernie, you eatin rebs? What did you eat today?’
‘Breakfast.’
‘Oh Lord, we better go by the Barn.’ Doesn’t matter what you tell her, she’s going by Bar-B-Chew Barn, believe me.
‘I can’t, Pam, I have to stay.’
‘Malarkey, come on now.’ She tugs my elbow. The force of it recommends the floor to my feet. ‘Eileena, I’m taking Vern – you tell Vaine Gurie this boy ain’t eaten, I’m double-parked out front, and she better hide some pounds before I see Barry.’
‘Leave him, Pam, Vaine ain’t through . . .’
‘I don’t see no handcuffs, and a child has a right to eat.’ Pam’s voice starts to rattle furniture.
‘I don’t make the rules,’ says Eileena. ‘I’m just sayin . . .’
‘Vaine can’t hold him – you know that. We’re gone,’ says Pam. ‘Love your hair.’
Eileena’s sigh follows us down the hallway. My ears flick around for signs of Gurie or the sheriff, but the offices seem empty; the sheriff’s offices that is. Next thing you know, I’m halfway out of the building in Palmyra’s gravity-field. You just can’t argue with this much modern woman, I tell you.
Outside, a jungle of clouds has grown over the sun. They kindle the whiff of damp dog that always blows around here before a storm, burping lightning without a sound. Fate clouds. They mean get the fuck out of town, go visit Nana or something, until things quiet down, until the truth seeps out. Get rid of the drugs from home, then take a road trip.
A shimmer rises off the hood of Pam’s ole Mercury. Martirio’s tight-assed buildings quiver through it, oil pumpjacks melt and sparkle along the length of Gurie Street. Yeah: oil, jackrabbits, and Guries are what you find in Martirio. This was once the second-toughest town in Texas, after Luling. Whoever got beat up in Luling must’ve crawled over here. These days our toughest thing is congestion at the drive-thru on a Saturday night. I can’t say I’ve seen too many places, but I’ve studied this one close and the learnings must be the same; all the money, and folk’s interest in fixing things, parade around the center of town, then spread outwards in a dying wave. Healthy girls skip around the middle in whiter-than-white panties, then regions of shorts and cotton prints radiate out to the edges, where tangled babes hang in saggy purple underwear. Just a broken ole muffler shop on the outskirts; no more sprinklers, no more lawns.
‘Lord,’ says Pam, ‘tell me why I can just taste a Chik ’n’ Mix.’
Fucken yeah, right. Even in winter the Mercury stinks of fried chicken, never mind today when it’s like a demon’s womb. Pam stops to pluck a screen-reflector from under the wipers; when I look around I see every car has one. Seb Harris rides through the haze at the end of the street, distributing them from his bike. Pam opens the thing out and squints at the writing: ‘Harris’s Store,’ it reads, ‘More, More, More!’
‘Lookit that,’ she says. ‘We just saved us the price of a Chik ’n’ Mix.’
Deep fucken trouble keeps my euphoria at bay. Pam just molds into the car. Her soul’s already knotted over the choice of side-order, you can tell. She’ll end up getting coleslaw anyway, on account of Mom says it’s healthy. It’s vegetables, see. Me, I need something healthier today. Like the afternoon bus out of town.
A siren wails past us at the corner of Geppert Street. Don’t ask me why, they can’t save any children now. Pam will miss this corner anyway – it’s fucken traditional, look, there she goes. Now she’ll have to cut back two blocks, and she’ll say, ‘Lord, nothing stays put in this town.’ Reporters and camera people roam the streets in packs. I keep my head down, and scan the floor for fire ants. ‘Far aints,’ Pam calls them. Fuck knows what other fauna climbs aboard in the century it takes her to get in and out of the fucken car. Wild Fucken Kingdom, I swear.
Today everybody at the Barn wears black, except for the Nikes on their feet. I identify the different models while they box up the chicken. Town’s like a club, see. You recognize fellow members by their shoes. They won’t even sell certain shoes to outsiders, it’s a fact. I watch these black forms scurry around with different-colored feet and, just like when anything weird screens through the Mercury window, Glen Campbell starts to sing ‘Galveston’ from Pam’s ole stereo. It’s a law of nature. Pam only has this one cassette, see – The Best of Glen Campbell. It jammed in the slot the first time she played it, and just kept on playing. Fate. Pam sings along with the same part of the song every time, the part about the girl. I think she once had a boyfriend from Wharton, which is closer to Galveston than here. No songs about Wharton I guess.
‘Vern, eat the bottom pieces before they get soggy.’
‘Then the top pieces will be on the bottom.’
‘Oh Lord.’ She lunges for the tub, but doesn’t get past the refresher wipes before we turn into Liberty Drive. She must’ve forgot about Liberty Drive today.
Look at all the girls crying by the school.
Galveston, oh Galveston . . .
Another luxury wagon parks up ahead, with even more flowers, even more girls. It maneuvers slowly around the stains on the road. Strangers with cameras move back to fit it all in.
I still hear your sea waves crashing . . .
Behind the girls, behind the flowers are the mothers, and behind the mothers are the counselors; senior brownies at a petting zoo.
While I watch the cannons flashing . . .
Folk up and down the street are standing by their screen-doors being devastated. Mom’s so-called friend Leona was already devastated last week, when Penney’s delivered the wrong color kitchen drapes. Typical of her to go off half-cocked.
‘Oh my Lord, Vernie, oh God – all those tiny crosses . . .’ I feel Palmyra’s hand on my shoulder, and find myself sobbing spit.
The picture of Jesus that hangs behind the sheriff’s door was taken at the crime scene. From a different angle than I last saw him. It doesn’t show all the other bodies around, all the warped, innocent faces. Not like the picture in my soul. Tuesday breaks through me like a fucken hemorrhage.
I clean my gun, and dream of Galves-ton . . .
*
Jesus Navarro was born with six fingers on each hand, and that wasn’t the most different thing about him. It’s what took him though, in the very, very end. He didn’t expect to die Tuesday; they found him wearing silk panties. Now girls’ underwear is a major focus of the investigation, go figure. His ole man says the cops planted them on him. Like, ‘Lingerie Squad! Freeze!’ I don’t fucken think so.
That morning crowds my mind. ‘Hay-zoose, slow the fuck up!’ I remember yelling to him.
A headwind worries our bikes on the way to school, weights them almost as heavy as this last Tuesday before summer vacation. Physics, then math, then physics again, some stupid experiment in the lab. Hell on fucken earth.
Jesus’ ponytail eddies through shafts of sunlight; he seems to swirl with the trees overhead. He’s changing, ole Jesus, turning pretty in an Indian kind of way. The stumps of his extra fingers have almost disappeared. He’s still clumsy as hell though, and his mind’s clumsy too; the certainty of our kid logic got washed away, leaving pebbles of anger and doubt that crack together with each new wave of emotion. My buddy, who once did the best David Letterman impression you ever saw, has been abducted by glandular acids. Sassy song and smell hormones must fume off his brain, the type that curdle if your mom senses them. But you get the feeling they ain’t regular hormones. He keeps secrets from me, like he never did before. He got weird. Nobody knows why.
I saw a show about adolescents that said role models were the key to develop
ment, same as for dogs. You could tell whoever made the show never met Jesus’ dad, though. Or mine, for that matter. My dad was better than Mr Navarro, until the end anyway, although I used to get pissed that he wouldn’t let me use his rifle, like Mr Navarro let Jesus use his. Now I cuss the day I ever saw my daddy’s gun, and I guess Jesus cusses his day too. He needed a different role model, but nobody was there for him. Our teacher Mr Nuckles spent all kinds of time with him after school, but I ain’t sure ole powder-puff Nuckles and his circus of fancy words really count. I mean, the guy’s over thirty, and you just know he sits down to piss. He spent all this time with Jesus, up at his place, and riding in his car, talking softly, with his head down, like those caring folk you see on TV. One time I saw them hug, I guess like brothers or something. Don’t even go there, really. The point is, in the end, Nuckles recommended a shrink. Jesus got worse after that.
Lothar ‘Lard-ass’ Larbey drives by in his ole man’s truck, flicking his tongue at my buddy. ‘Wetback fudge-packer!’ he yells.
Jesus just drops his head. I sting for him sometimes, with his retreaded, second-hand Jordan New Jacks, and his goddam alternative lifestyle, if that’s what you call this new fruity thing. His character used to fit him so clean, like a sports sock, back when we were kings of the universe, when the dirt on a sneaker mattered more than the sneaker itself. We razed the wilds outside town with his dad’s gun, terrorized ole beer cans, watermelons, and trash. It’s like we were men before we were boys, back before we were whatever the fuck we are now. I feel my lips clamp together with the strangeness of life, and watch my buddy pull alongside me on his bike. His eyes glaze over, like they do since he started seeing that shrink. You can tell he’s retreated into one of his philosophical headfucks.
‘Man, remember the Great Thinker we heard about in class last week?’ he asks.
‘The one that sounded like “Manual Cunt”?’
‘Yeah, who said nothing really happens unless you see it happen.’
‘All I remember is asking Naylor if he ever heard of a Manual Cunt, and him going, “I only drive automatics.” We dropped the biggest fucken load.’
Jesus clicks his tongue. ‘Shit, Vermin, you always only thinkin bout dropped loads. Just loads, and shit, and girl tangs. This is real, man. Manual Cunt asked the thing about the kitten – the riddle, that if there was a box with a kitten inside, and if the box also had an open bottle of death-gas or whatever, that the kitten’s definitely going to knock over at any moment . . .’
‘Whose kitten is this? I bet they’re pissed.’
‘Fuck, Verm, I’m serious. This is a real-time philosophy question. The kitten’s in this box, definitely gonna die at some moment, and Manual Cunt asks if it may as well be called dead already, technically, unless somebody’s there to see it still alive, to know it exists.’
‘Wouldn’t it be easier just to stomp on the fucken kitten?’
‘It’s not about wasting the kitten, asshole.’ You can tick Jesus off real easy these days. His logic got all serious.
‘What’s the fucken point, Jeez?’
He frowns and answers slowly, digging each word out with a shovel. ‘That if things don’t happen unless you see them happening – do they still happen if you know they’re gonna – but don’t tell nobody . . .?’
As the words reach my ears, the mausoleum shapes of Martirio High School slam into view through the trees. A bitty chill like a worm burrows through me.
three
Too fucken late. When you spot a jackrabbit it automatically spots you back; it’s a fact of nature, in case you didn’t know. Same goes for Vaine Gurie, who I spy in the road by my house. Storms clouds park over her patrol car.
‘Pam, stop! Leave me right here . . .’
‘Get a grip, we’re nearly home.’ Pam don’t stop easy once she’s going.
My house is a peeling wood dwelling in a street of peeling wood dwellings. Before you see it through the willows, you see the oil pumpjack next door. I don’t know about your town, but around here we decorate our pumpjacks. Even have competitions for them. Our pumpjack is fixed up like a mantis, with a head and legs stuck on. This giant mantis just pump, pump, pumps away at the dirt next door. The local ladies decorated it. This year’s prize went to the Godzilla pumpjack on Calavera Drive, though.
As Pam throttles back the car, I see media reporters up the street, and a stranger lazing next to a van in the shade of the Lechugas’ willow. He moves a branch to watch us pass. He smiles, don’t ask me why.
‘That man’s been there all morning,’ says Pam, squinting into the willow.
‘He a stranger, or media?’ I ask.
Pam shakes her head, pulling up at my house. ‘He ain’t from around here, I know that much. He has a camcorder, though . . .’
Fuck, fuck, fuck goes the mantis, like it does every four seconds of my life. Gas, brake, gas, brake, Pam berths the car like a ferry-boat. Fuck, fuck, gas, brake, I’m snagged in the apparatus of Martirio. Across the street, Mrs Lechuga’s drapes are tightly pulled. At number twenty, ole Mrs Porter stares from behind her screen-door with Kurt, the medium-size black and white dog. Kurt deserves a place in the fucken Barking Hall of Fame, although he ain’t made a sound since Tuesday. Weird how dogs know things.
Next thing you know, a shadow falls over the car. It’s Vaine Gurie. ‘Who do we have here?’ she asks, opening my door. Her voice plays from deep in her throat, like a parrot’s. You want to check her mouth for the little boxing-glove kind of tongue.
Mom scurries across our porch with a tray of listless ole joy cakes. She’s in Spooked Deer mode. She looked this way the last time I saw my daddy alive, although Spooked Deer can mean anything from her frog oven-mitt being misplaced, to actual Armageddon. But her mitt’s right there, under the tray. She heads down the steps past our willow, the one with her wishing bench under it. The wishing bench is quite a new feature around here, but already the damned thing’s listing into the dirt. She pays no mind, and flounces up to Pam’s car.
‘Howdy pardner,’ she says to me, dripping with that cutesyshucksy Chattanooga-buddy-boy shit she started when I first showed evidence of having a dick. Feel the bastard shrivel now. I pull away, in vain because she chases me, covers me with spit and lipstick and fuck knows what else. Placenta, probably. All the while she smiles a smile you know you’ve seen before, but just can’t put your finger on. Clue: the movie where the mother visits this young family, and by the end they have to grapple fucken scissors from her hands.
‘Gh-rrr.’ Vaine steps between us. ‘I’m afraid your pardner here absconded from our interview.’
‘Well call me Doris, Vaine! I’m almost a Gurie myself, I’m so cozy with LuDell, and Reyna and all.’
‘Is that right. Mrs Little, let me explain where things stand . . .’
‘Well these cakes are just singing out to be tasted – Vaine?’
‘I’m afraid I don’t make the laws, ma’am.’
‘At least come up to the house – no point getting hot and ornery, we can straighten things out,’ says Mom. I stiffen. You don’t want Gurie poking around my room or anything. My fucken closet or anything.
‘I’m afraid Vernon will have to come with me,’ says Gurie. ‘Then we need to take a look through his room.’
‘Well, God, Vaine – he hasn’t done any wrong, he always does like he’s told . . .’
‘Is that right. So far he’s done nothing but lie, and when I trust him alone he absconds. We still can’t account for him at the time of the tragedy.’
‘He wasn’t even there!’
‘Not what he told us, he told us he was in math.’
‘It was the time of our math period,’ I correct. Print me a fucken T-shirt, for chrissakes.
‘Then there’s no need to worry,’ says Gurie. ‘If you have nothing to hide.’
‘Well but Vaine, the news says it’s open and shut – everybody knows the cause.’
Gurie’s eyelids flutter. ‘Everybody might know the ef
fect, Mrs Little. We’ll see about the cause.’
‘But the news says . . .’
‘The news says a lot of things, ma’am. The fact is we’ve run this county dry of body-bags, and I, for one, hold the opinion that it’d take more than a single, unaided gunman to do that.’
Mom stumbles to her wishing bench, abandoning her cakes to the side. She overbalances a little as the bench settles unevenly into the dirt. The fucken bench settles a different way every week, like it’s indexed to her head or something. ‘Well I don’t know why everything has to happen to me. We have witnesses, Vaine – witnesses!’
Gurie sighs. ‘Ma’am, you know how accessible the so-called witnesses are. Maybe your boy knew. Maybe not. The fact is, he absconded before our interview was over – people with airtight alibis just don’t do that.’
This is how long it takes Pam to lever herself out of the Mercury. It grunts with relief as she lets go the frame. Fire ants catapult across the seat.
‘I took him, Vaine. Found him near dead from starvation.’
Gurie folds her arms. ‘He was offered food . . .’
‘Fiddledy-boo, the Pritikin diet wouldn’t even feed the nose on a growing boy.’ One sweaty eye snaps to Gurie. ‘How’s it going, Vaine – the Pritikin diet?’
‘Oh – fine. Gh-rr.’
That’s Gurie stuck through like a bug. The crumpled-looking stranger with the camcorder catches my eye from under the Lechugas’ willow, then looks at Vaine. He still has a smile without promise, a chalk smile that strikes me edge-ways, don’t ask me why. Gurie pays no mind. She just fixes him in the corner of her eye. The guy wears tan overalls with a white dinner jacket, like ole Ricardo Moltenbomb, or whoever Mom’s favorite was who had the dwarf on Fantasy Island. He eventually penguin-walks over the road, fixing his camcorder onto a tripod. It tells you he’s either a tourist, or a reporter. Only way to tell reporters these days is by their names – ever notice how fucken bent your local reporters’ names are? Like, Zirkie Hartin, Aldo Manaldo, and shit.
‘So,’ says Gurie, ignoring Moltenbomb. ‘Let’s get this child into town.’ Child my ass.