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Authors: William J. Mann

All American Boy (39 page)

BOOK: All American Boy
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Regina laughs at the memory, standing there giggling in the living room.

“And what's so goddamn funny, old woman?”

Her eyes meet Kyle's.

“Look,” her nephew growls, “I'm in a hurry here. I need some food. What you got in the icebox?”

“I've got—oh, I'm not sure—fish sticks, I think.”

“Make 'em up with some beans, okay?”

“All right, Kyle.”

“Luz!” he shouts. “Where the fuck are you?”

What I did, I did for Luz
.

He was a bad boy, Kyle. Always was. She knew that, even when she let him come live with her. But he had no place to go. His mother was dead and he stood there crying in Regina's living room. “You're all I have, Aunt Regina. All I have!”

So she said yes. He'd promised to do little jobs for her around the house—fix the garage door, paint the ceilings—but he never did. He would just sit there holding belching contests with his friends around the dinner table, insisting that a good belch was a compliment to the chef. But Regina never found it complimentary. She would just open the window because the smell would get so bad.

Then out would come the cases of beer and the loud, pounding music on the stereo. What was that band called? Leonard Skinner, Regina thinks. Something like that. It wasn't the type of music she liked, but she tried to put up with it, because it would be nice to have voices in the house once again, young voices, laughing and carrying on. Maybe having Kyle wouldn't be so bad, if it meant young people and laughter.

But then Kyle had started taking money, and calling her names, and he bullied poor Luz so much that it made Regina cry. She'd sit up in her bed at night, listening to them having sex in the other room, Luz crying out—not in pleasure, Regina was certain, but in terrible, hideous, unbearable agony. Even getting up and flushing the toilet did no good. They just kept going at it, the bed squeaking, Luz crying, Kyle making horrible sounds like a dog.

When was the last time you saw him, Mother? When was the last time you saw Kyle?

It was the night Luz picked him up at the train station in Mayville. He came in there instead of the naval airport where she usually got him. And he wasn't wearing his uniform when he came into the house. He tossed his duffel bag full of dirty clothes onto the couch, immediately dialing numbers on the phone and whispering angrily to whoever picked up on the other end.

She can hear him now, the whispering that went on into the night.

She turns, following the phone cord. It's stretched down the hall into Kyle's room, pulled under the crack in his door—the same way Walter used to pull it all those years ago, when he'd take the phone down there and talk for hours. How angry Walter would get if she knocked on his door. How very angry. How much anger there's always been in this house.

“—
I don't give a shit, Luz will do what I say
—”

Regina stops outside Kyle's door. His words, whispered but fierce, come at her through the night.
Luz
. He's talking about Luz.

Sometimes, when Walter was in his room, Regina would quietly approach, pressing her ear against the door. It was naughty of her, she knew that, but she did it anyway. And what she heard was terrible. Terrible, awful things her son was saying. Dirty, sexual things. But she listened anyway. She listened and would remember them at night, lying beside her husband, snoring and smelling of whiskey. Her husband—that man she lived with for almost twenty years, who bellowed at her and cursed at her and breathed fire when he was angry, that man she never knew, never liked, and has never missed.

She presses her ear up against the door the way she used to do.

“She speaks Spanish, so she'll be perfect,” Kyle is saying.

A pause.

“Fuck that, man. I'll just tell her she
has
to come.”

Another pause.

“Look, fucker, that isn't even your concern. I'll handle Luz. You just get me the tickets. Two one-ways to Mexico, preferably nonstop.”

Mexico?

“As soon as you
can
, fucker! Tomorrow, the next day. I don't have a lot of time. I'm supposed to be back on the ship in three days. They'll come looking for me after that. Hold on a second, all right?”

Regina gasps. Is he coming toward the door? Will he open it and find her here? What will he do? She starts to bolt but then she hears him strike a match. The pungent aroma of marijuana wafts through the door.

“Stop worrying about
Luz
, you asshole. She'll do what I tell her. If I tell her I need her to come along, she will.”

Regina's heart is thudding in her chest. She turns, heading back to her room, but she's hurrying too fast. She steps on a creaking board, and it sings out into the night.

“Hold on a minute,” she hears Kyle say.

By the time he flings open his door she's back inside her room, her door shut behind her. She leans up against it, breathing heavily. She never knew she could move so fast.

What else, she thinks, might she be able to do?

“What did you call me for?”

Her son's voice is cold, unforgiving.

“Walter?”

“Missy said you called. What's going on?”

“Oh. Walter.” She presses a hand to head. What was she thinking? Why had she called him?

“I need to find a school for Jorge,” she says. “A special school.”

“That's not your responsibility, Mother. You need to call his father—”

“No, no, no, it
is
my responsibility! It
is
!”

She hears her son sigh on the other end of the line. “You called about the
wood
, Missy said. You wanted me to bring some wood in for you.”

“Oh, yes, the
wood
, Walter. For the stove in the basement.”

“Fine. I'll do it tomorrow. On my way out of town.”

“Oh, thank you, Walter. Thank you.”

He's a good boy, her son is. Always has been. She hangs up the phone, remembering how good he always was, how she would look down at him sleeping and think:
You're a good boy, Walter. You're a very good boy
.

Regina didn't know about boys, of course, but still, Walter was good, there was no doubt about that—and there were times, she had to admit, she truly enjoyed being with her son. Watching
Match Game
and eating goulash. Planting marigolds in the rock garden. Shopping at Grant's, playing peekaboo between the ladies' dress racks, giggling when the sales clerk placed a frilly hat on the boy's head and he paraded around the store.

And how Regina had
loved
listening to Walter read. He would do
so well
whenever one of his teachers or Father Carson would ask him to read a passage from the Bible up at the pulpit during Sunday Mass. Regina never liked going to Mass, but when Walter read it was worth it. It was like
music
listening to Walter read, it really was.

He had gone on to become an actor. Yes, Regina had seen him. She'd catch him on a commercial or on the Lifetime channel late at night when she couldn't sleep—like in that film where he frightened poor Susan Lucci so bad. Regina hoped maybe he'd turn out good in the end, not really be a psycho killer at all. Maybe he and Susan would even get married at the end, but no such luck. Still, it was fun to watch her son on television, remembering those years he'd walk around the backyard, talking to himself, acting out scenes.

He had gone to the city, just as Regina had once, but Walter hadn't come back the way she had, riding in Uncle Axel's bumpy truck, leaving the tall buildings and flashing lights behind. Regina still remembers how she cried when they passed the sign on the south road that read
ENTERING BROWN'S MILL.
That was before they built the highway, and the only way into town from the city had been through the orchards. Regina was grateful for the darkness offered by the trees, so Rocky wouldn't see her cry.

“We had a dream we might become famous,” she had told Aunt Selma, who'd scoffed at her.

“Please, Mother, help me,” Walter had said to her. “It's my dream!”

Dreams
. What's real and what are dreams? Maybe dreams
are
real. Maybe she really
did
go to the circus. Only she didn't go during the day, and she didn't go while Mama was still alive, but rather at night, while she slept, and Mama had come down from heaven and scooped her up and taken her to the circus, because she'd always wanted to take her when she was alive but had never had the chance, not until now.

And so that's how she killed Kyle. She'd always wanted to do it, always wanted to take the hoe or the shovel or the iron rake and smash it down into his head—into Robert's head, into Papa's. And so she had finally done it, brought that rake or shovel or hoe right down into Kyle's head as he slept there on the couch, and thereby saved Luz from Mexico, from everything Kyle had planned for her, from the whole horrible life he was getting ready to force upon her.

And then she'd mopped up the blood and made herself a cup of tea.

“Hello?”

Regina's voice cut through the morning.

“Is this the Brown's Mill police department?”

A pause.

“Yes, this is Regina Day. May I speak with Officer Garafolo? Oh, yes, hello, how are you? I'm fine. No, no, it's not anything like that. I want to report a missing person.”

Another pause.

“My nephew. Kyle Francis Day. He was in the navy. I think he's gone AWOL.”

She looks up as she settles the phone back into its cradle. Walter is coming down the hall from his room.

“He's gone?”

“Yes. He's gone. You can be sure of that.”

Walter pulls out a chair and sits down with her at the table.

“So can I be an actor, Mom? Is that okay?”

“Of
course
it's okay, Walter.”

“Really?”

“Yes.
Really
. Maybe you'll become famous.”

“Like you were.”

She smiles a little sadly. “Almost. I was almost famous.” She starts to cry.

“What is it, Mom? Why are you crying?”

He reaches over and takes her hand.

“Oh, Walter,” she says, “I don't know what's happening to me.”

On the other end of the phone she hears him take in a breath of air and hold it there: “Are you still seeing Doctor Fitzgerald?” he asks finally.

“No, no, no, he died, Walter. Years ago.”

“Then you need to find a new doctor, Mom. I can't do anything for you.”

She feels a surge of feeling in her chest, a desperate, silent scream. “Would you come home, Walter?” she asks all of a sudden. “Please? I don't know what else to do.”

There's no answer.

“Please, Walter. Please?”

Still there's silence.

“Oh, Walter. I—I think I may be losing my mind.”

The wind whips against the side of the house.

The wood. She needs to fire up the woodstove. She can't wait until tomorrow. She must do it tonight. She'll do it herself, if she has to. Only then—only when the woodstove is blazing—will everything finally be okay.

She braves the cold in her pink nightgown, heading down the back steps. There's a large moon in the sky, offering a milky white light. The trees are bare, their limbs silhouetted against the sky. Assaulted by the wind, she makes her way across the lawn. Then, deep inside it, she hears a voice.

“Mrs. Day! Mrs. Day!”

Regina looks up and squints.

“Luz!”

The girl approaches from the other side of the fence that lines Regina's backyard. Kyle's car is behind her, parked in the driveway.

“Mrs. Day, I'm sorry I've been gone so long,” she says.

A frisky wind catches Luz's black hair, blowing it around her lovely face.

Regina grips the top of the fence, staring into the girl's eyes. “Oh, Luz, I'm so happy to see you!”

The girl starts to cry. “Oh, Mrs. Day,” she says. “I need to ask your forgiveness.”

“Forgiveness for what, dear?”

“For what I did.” Luz's tears fall against her cheeks in the moonlight.

“What did you do?”

“I took some money from you, Mrs. Day. I'm so sorry. So very, very sorry …”

Regina just wraps her arms around herself.

“Two hundred dollars.” Luz composes herself. “I spent it. But here—” She thrusts a fifty-dollar bill over the fence at Regina. “I'm going to pay you back! Every cent.”

Regina looks at the money but doesn't accept it. “Why did you take the money, Luz?”

“I needed it.” She's crying harder, not looking Regina in the eyes.

“So you could go to the city and become a model. Isn't that right?”

The girl lifts her eyes to Regina's. Mascara runs down her cheeks.

“You keep that money,” Regina says. “
Use it
. It's
time
, Luz. Time for you to
go
.”

Luz says nothing at first. She just keeps standing there holding the money across the fence. Finally she withdraws her hand, crumbling the fifty back into her palm.

“You can't stay here in Brown's Mill,” Regina tells her. “I know what's that like, how a girl with dreams needs to get out of here. That's why I did what I did. I did it for
you
, Luz. And as much as I will miss you, it would be selfish to want you to stay. You have to
go
.”

The girl wipes her eyes. “You're right. I
can't
stay here. I've never been happy here. You know that.”

“And in the city, you
can
be happy.”

Luz starts to tear up again. “Oh, I don't know about that, Mrs. Day …”

“Of
course
you can. You're going to be a famous model.”

Luz just starts to cry harder. Regina reaches across the fence and rests her knotty, spotted hand on Luz's shiny black hair.

BOOK: All American Boy
2.21Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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