Authors: Bill Cameron
Tags: #RJ - Skin Kadash - Life Story - Murder - Kids - Love
“Or not enough.”
“Ruby, … Christ.”
“Where is Grammy’s ring?”
“You can’t …”
One choice. Hide the body. But how do you hide a body when it’s standing on two feet, trying to talk you out of putting it in a hole? What was she supposed to do? Let him come back? The hole couldn’t be undug. The gun couldn’t be unfired. She saw the dark shine of blood on his shirt. How much longer could he stand there with a bullet in his chest? How much more could she take?
It needed to end. He needed to be in the hole.
“Get on your knees.”
“Ruby, for God’s sake.”
“Get … on … your
knees
.”
He knelt. She let the gun track him to the ground, aimed at the center of his chest. His damp face pleaded. In that moment, she could imagine a time when he had been handsome. Long ago, when he and Bella were young and brash and eager to flick shit into the eyes of whoever dared disapprove. But young and handsome and strong had eroded into a broken addict—a thief—begging for his worthless life from the girl least likely to grant it to him.
“Don’t do this, baby girl.” His rasp echoed the rain. “What would your Grammy say?”
She squeezed the trigger.
- 37 -
Post-Season, April 1989
A pain in her stomach awoke her. The pale touch of daybreak filtered in around the window shade. Huck lay on his side, facing away from her. He had taken most of the covers. The corner of sheet covering her smelled of a faint must, a scent which stirred her unsettled bowels. She threw the sheet aside and for a moment lay frozen, sure someone was watching her. But all she heard was Huck’s breathing and the ticking of the electric radiator under the window.
She ran her hands across her skin. Her flesh felt strange to her. She turned her head, gazed at Huck’s tangled hair, at his muscled shoulder sticking out from beneath the blanket. The smell was him, and it was her. The skin of her breasts and stomach and thighs was her, and him. The recognition gathered in her chest and swelled, a strange and curious feeling of loss. In the dark, she found herself blinking back tears. She looked at Huck again.
“You’re a good man.” She whispered. “I’m not sorry it was you.”
Her skirt and jacket were draped across a chair back, blouse folded on the seat. Shoes side by side on the floor. She hadn’t let him watch her undress—down to her panties and bra at first. Those came off later, as she warmed to his touch. She slipped out of bed and dressed quickly. Then she hesitated. She didn’t know what to do. She didn’t want to give him a chance to ask her to stay. She felt confused and disjointed and sorrowful. She needed to be alone, to escape from the scent and the electric tremor of his touch. But she didn’t want to leave without an acknowledgment of … what?
She didn’t know.
At last she leaned over and kissed his forehead, then fled before he stirred through the quiet house and out to the road.
She wanted to get home before Bella realized Ruby Jane had been out all night. Her only choice was to walk. These ridiculous shoes. Yet before she could raise a good blister, a car slowed beside her, a silver Escort.
Mrs. Parmelee was behind the wheel. “Forgot your running shoes?”
Ruby Jane blushed and lowered her gaze.
“Climb in. I’ll give you a ride.”
She expected an interrogation, but Mrs. Parmelee only asked where she lived, then muttered something about West Alex and breakfast with her parents. The drive lasted a few long, aching minutes, Ruby Jane’s nerves tight as a drum head. When they stopped at the end of the driveway, Ruby Jane hesitated. The house was dark, the Caprice in the driveway. No other car with it—her mother hadn’t brought a friend home. Not a friend who could drive anyway.
“Out later than you were supposed to be?”
Ruby Jane nodded, though she’d never had a curfew. Her thoughts were still on Huck, and Gabi, a tangle of thorns. She turned to Mrs. Parmelee.
“Is hate a good reason to want to do something?”
Her teacher smiled, whimsical and a little bit sad. “Ruby, you don’t need me to answer a question like that.”
“I guess not.” She breathed in, breathed out. “Sometimes I think I dunked because I hate Clarice.”
“You didn’t enjoy it?”
“Yeah, sure.”
“How can you take pleasure in something you do out of hate?”
“Maybe I’m Darth Vader. My hate makes me strong.”
“When you dunked, you used the dark side of the Force?”
“You make it sound so ridiculous.”
“But Yoda told us, ‘Fear leads to anger. Anger leads to hate. Hate leads to suffering.’”
“Hate leads to dunking.”
“I don’t think you’re being very serious.”
“I guess not.”
“What are you afraid of, Ruby Jane?”
“Of not being able to dunk.”
Mrs. Parmelee rests a gentle hand on her arm. “What are you afraid of in that house?”
She felt tears gather. “I should go.” She got out before Mrs. Parmelee could say anything more, waited in the driveway until she pulled away. Mrs. Parmelee waved, fingers curled with uncertainty. But then she was gone.
Ruby Jane went to the back door, put her key in the lock.
The door swung wide. Her mother glared at her through the opening, eyes bloody coals in her drawn face.
“Where the hell have you been?”
“I—”
Her mother swarmed onto the stoop. Ruby Jane cringed. Bella’s hair was a snarl on her head, a Medusa tangle of henna and steel. Her mouth was open now, teeth bared. “I asked you a question.”
“Clarice—”
“I know you weren’t with Clarice, you lying bitch. You weren’t with any of your basketball friends.”
They’re not my friends
. But then she thought of Gabi. Gabi was her friend, and she’d betrayed her.
“Get in here.”
Ruby Jane ducked her head and pushed through the doorway past her mother. Before she could dart through the kitchen, her mother grabbed her forearm and yanked her around.
“Answer my question, young lady.”
Since Dale’s disappearance, her mother had bagged a new boyfriend every month, sometimes every week. But Ruby Jane understood too well there were rules for Bella and rules for everyone else.
“I was with a friend.”
“What friend?” Bella’s breath was ripe with a fresh bourbon rinse. “A
boy
friend? Were you slutting around with some boy? Is that it?”
Ruby Jane twisted free and fled up the stairs. Bella followed, screaming, but Ruby Jane was faster. She ran into her room and slammed the door. Bella rattled the doorknob, beat the door with her fists. Screamed.
Whore
. Ruby Jane leaned back against the door.
Cocksucker
. She felt each blow in her scalp, bit her lip rather than cry out. After a while, her mother gave up —
special place in hell for sluts like you
— and faded away. Back to The Studio, or down to the cabinet over the refrigerator. Ruby Jane fell onto her bed and imagined she was a little girl again.
Later, hours later, the phone rang. Ruby Jane opened her door as Bella answered. “Are you the one she was whoring herself to last night? … I don’t care what you think, fellow. You’re not to call here again.” Ruby Jane slipped back into her room before her mother knew she was there. Later, her mother’s door slammed, and a little while after Bella stomped down the stairs. The car started. Ruby Jane watched her mother drive down Walnut and disappear.
She ran to the phone, but hesitated before dialing. Gabi, or Huck? She decided to call Huck first. The conversation wouldn’t take long. She didn’t know what to say to him, and after his chat with Bella, he would understand if she couldn’t talk. She wanted to apologize for her mother. Then she’d call Gabi and, hopefully, fix things. Try to fix things.
No one answered at Huck’s—answering machine. She didn’t leave a message, didn’t want his whole family to hear her voice. She took a deep breath, and dialed Gabi.
It rang and rang and rang. No answer, no machine. She hung up, dialed again. Same result. Outside, she heard her mother’s car in the drive, tires popping on gravel. She slipped up the stairs and into the bathroom. She locked the door, turned on the shower. Bella could shout at the door all she wanted. Ruby Jane didn’t care. She would fix things with Gabi tomorrow.
- 38 -
Post-Season, April 1989
She entered from the student parking lot. Not her usual way, but then she didn’t usually drive her mother’s car without permission either. She’d overslept and missed the bus. Bella would be pissed when she discovered the car gone, but Ruby Jane figured if Bella didn’t want her to take the car, she shouldn’t have chased Valium with bourbon. She parked a minute before the first warning bell, ran through the double doors next to the locker room as it rang. Hoping she wouldn’t see Huck. Hoping she would.
The hallway was jammed, students gathered in clumps at open lockers. The girls were dressed like a collision of Molly Ringwald and Lucy Ewing: bangles, shoulders, and asymmetrical hair. The boys looked like they couldn’t decide which John Hughes character they wanted to be. She looked at her watch. Less than two minutes til first period, but no one was moving. The atmosphere in the corridor was suffused with electric whispers.
Ellie called me. We’d just got home from church
.
I was at the Pizza Palace
.
Mister Unger appeared at the far end the hallway. “Okay, everyone, time for class. Find your rooms please.” His voice was sharp; it pierced the veil of conversation. He repeated himself again and again as he moved down the hallway. Groups scattered in his wake.
He pulled up short when he saw Ruby Jane. His eyes narrowed, then he put his hand on the shoulder of one of the boys walking past, said something to him. The boy trotted off. The corridor went suddenly quiet.
“What’s going on?” She wasn’t talking to anyone in particular, and no one responded.
She doesn’t know
.
“I don’t know what?”
How could she not know?
Unger stopped in front of her, his face unreadable. “Ruby, could you come with me?”
“What’s the matter?”
“Just come with me.”
It couldn’t be about her and Huck. On the list of Valley View’s sexually active, she didn’t rate a footnote. There wasn’t even a scandal in the making. Huck wasn’t going with anyone, she wasn’t going with anyone. There’d be none of the drama associated with cheating and break-ups. Huck wasn’t Hardy Berman, and she wasn’t Clarice. Ruby Jane was notoriously unattached. A lay might throw off her lay-up.
“Where are we going?”
“To my office.”
“Why?”
“Ruby, please …”
His voice wasn’t angry. Wasn’t accusatory. It was … anxious. His eyes were bloodshot and rimmed with red skin.