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Authors: A. S. King

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Everybody Sees the Ants (28 page)

BOOK: Everybody Sees the Ants
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LUCKY LINDERMAN RETURNS
 

The
first person I see at the pool is Danny, who flashes a quick smile before he gives me the finger as a joke. He’s over by the bathroom door, scrubbing down the black rubber slip-proof mats. I follow Mom to a shady spot under a tree and proceed to lose any nerve I ever had in my scrawny, pathetic body.

While Mom sets up her chair and applies sunscreen, I sit cross-legged and look around the pool. It’s early, and the pool is empty except for the swim team stragglers and a few lap swimmers. I look back at Danny and I think about what Ginny said to me:
Friends act like friends
. My stomach tightens.

Mom digs out her swim cap from our pool bag and fits it over her head. I decide that I want to swim some laps, too. So I do. Mom takes lane three and I take lane five and we swim.

At first my brain focuses only on what my eyes see. The black
line, the blue bottom. The black caulk at the seams. The bubbles that my breath creates and the waves and currents of my arms and legs moving through the water. I can taste the chlorine and feel the pressure on my eyeballs. I can feel my scalp cutting through the water and my new cheek enjoying the cool, refreshing liquid.

After a while I get bored, so I dry off and sit on a bench in the sun and close my eyes and daydream about the new me. School is going to be different. Life is going to be different. I am going to be brave.

“Hey, dickhead!” Nader calls from the office door. “The nuthouse called. They want your mom back.”

My stomach double-knots as I replay the last Freddy pool scene in my head—the scene in which Kim promised us “disciplinary action.” Am I a fool to have believed that he’d be fired for what he did to me? Am I really still that naive? After all these years? I feel my red face and pick Maui off my cheek and flick it. Danny’s head pops up behind the concession stand. Nader appears next to him, with a stripe of zinc oxide across his nose and a whistle around his neck. The ants roll out a tiny howitzer and begin to calculate coordinates.

I watch my mother do another slow lap of breaststroke, and I dream up ways I can just stop coming here. Before I manage to think up a foolproof excuse, Lara and her mom appear at the gate. Lara smiles my way and gives a halfhearted wave as her mother gives their cards to Petra and they walk to their usual space behind the trees near the volleyball net.

This intensifies the feeling that I have to get away from this place. If I have to be humiliated in a public place, that’s
one thing. But being humiliated in front of Lara Jones just sucks. I walk slowly toward them, even though I’m dreading the pity she’s about to dish. We meet at her blanket.

“Hey!” Lara says. “You’re back!” She’s holding her library book with her finger in the page as a bookmark, as though she’d been reading the whole way to the pool.

“Yep. Here I am.”

“Did you have a good time?”

“Yeah. I guess,” I say. “It was hot, that’s for sure.” She nods and smiles. “Anything exciting happen while I was away?” I ask.

She nods and winks while her mouth says, “Nope. Nothing exciting.” This means yes, but she can’t tell me in front of her mother. She starts walking away from the blanket and says, “Are you okay? We were worried about you.”

“Yeah. Thanks.” We walk toward the tetherball pole, out of earshot. She keeps her finger in her book and hugs it to her chest.

“I was so glad to see your car in the parking lot again,” she says, gesturing me closer to her. She switches to a whisper. She tells me Charlotte was there on Friday doing funny dives with her little brother. “Her bikini top came off again,” she says. “And since Nader was the senior guard on duty, he made her get out of the pool in front of everyone. It was horrible.”

“Shit,” I say.

“I mean, she covered herself the best she could with her arm, but you know—it was still awful. My mom complained to the board of directors. A few people did. They want him fired. That guy is such a jerk.”

“Yeah. A total jerk,” I say. I feel bad now. I feel bad for not calling the cops when he beat me up three weeks ago. If I’d done it, none of that would have happened. We start walking back toward her mother, who is now looking at us with those eyes mothers have when they think their kids are experiencing puppy love.

“Do you want to play some gin later?”

“Yeah. Sure. I’d love to,” I say. “Finish your book first. I can tell you’re dying to get to the end.”

“The next one is waiting for me at the library,” she says. She opens the book and sits down in the shade of the surrounding trees. I think about Ginny and how she was the first girl I ever wanted to kiss. The ants make smooching noises as I realize Lara is the next girl I want to kiss.

I see Mom drying out in the sun on her beach chair. Her eyes are closed. I sit down next to her and say, “Hey.”

“Hey.”

“Did you see who’s working today?”

She opens her eyes and squints around the pool grounds. “No.”

“Nader McMillan.”

She sighs.

“Doesn’t seem like he got fired, does it?” I say, pointing to my cheek.

She shakes her head and swears under her breath. “That’s my fault. Totally my fault, Lucky. I just—” Her voice wobbles a bit. “I just had so many other things going on.”

“It’s not your fault,” I say.

“No. When you become a parent, you have certain responsibilities. Totally. My. Fault.” She stresses each word with a hand motion.

Lara turns a final page of her book and reads it. She gets to the end, stares out into the blurry distance, sighs and then closes the book. Mom sees me watching this.

“Seriously, Mom. It’s not your fault. It’s not your fault he didn’t get fired, and it’s not your fault he’s an asshole.” I say. I scratch my itchy cheek, and the last of Hawaii—my cheekbone Mauna Kea—peels off and lands on my leg.

She stares into space for a minute. “Did I ever tell you what my mother used to say about assholes?” Her voice is cheery, as if our conversation just rounded a corner.

I shake my head.

“She’d say ‘The world is full of assholes. What are you doing to make sure you’re not one of them?’ ”

I say, “Wow,” because that’s probably the coolest thing I ever heard.

“Anytime any of us stepped out of line, she’d say that to us.” She shakes her head. “The woman was a saint.”

I meet Lara under the pavilion for a two-out-of-three gin match an hour later. She beats me the first time. I get totally lucky the second time and am dealt a near-winning hand. We sit there for a while between games, watching the scene together. The day-camp kids have complete control of the deep end now. Mom is over at our blanket, and I watch her call out to Kim the manager and stand talking to her for a few minutes.

I can tell from Kim’s body language that she is apologizing. I can tell from Mom’s body language that she is quoting her mother:
What are you doing to make sure you’re not one of them?

Tonight for dinner Dad makes a particularly scrumptious batch of barbecued ribs, and he lets me grill corn on my own without telling me how to do it better. I eat like a caveman. He makes a few jokes about his workday, and Mom laughs. She complains about the day-camp kids taking over her precious lane three, and he makes fun of her for ever thinking it was her lane to begin with. I listen and just eat and eat and eat.

“I think the McMillan kid might get fired tomorrow,” Mom says.

“About time,” Dad says.

They look at me, and all I can do is smile.

I’m not really smiling about Nader getting fired. I’m smiling because I feel like I’m part of a normal family. Sure, my father is still mostly turtle. And my mother is still going to keep swimming laps to appease her pool god. But
I
feel normal now. Not sure why. Not sure I should care why. I just do. I am so satisfied by this, and by the larger-than-usual portion of ribs I had for dinner, that I fall asleep early, before the
FMC
hour on the Food Channel, and I steer myself to Granddad Harry.

RESCUE MISSION #114—FIXING VIC
 

I see us from a distance at first. Granddad and I are in the tree, swinging our legs. Limb check: all present. He’s smiling with
the few teeth he has left, and I’m smiling, too. I can’t hear what we’re talking about, but I know it’s good.

Then I zoom in and Granddad says, “You are a fine father to my son,” which takes me a while to process. He means I’m being the father to my father that Granddad never was. “Thank you,” he says.

We’re silent for about five whole minutes as we watch the sun dapple spots on the jungle floor, and the canopy above us sways with the breeze.

“I feel very fortunate to have had these years with you,” Granddad Harry says.

“Me too.”

“Watching you grow into a man has been the best experience of my life,” he says.

I feel hairs growing on my chest instantly. My sperm count increases. I say, “I figured out what to do about Nader McMillan.”

“I see.”

“I’m going to talk to him. Face him, you know?”

“Your grandmother would be proud. She was always the vigilante in our family.”

At the thought of her, I sadden. “She missed you so much,” I say.

“I’ll see her soon,” he says. “She’ll be happy we fixed Vic.”

Suddenly I’m by myself again, walking down a jungle path. I’m thinking:
Did we fix Vic? How?
I look up to the branches above me and can’t find Granddad anywhere.

 
THE LAST THING YOU NEED TO KNOW—MISSING LIMBS
 

I
take an extra-long shower and concentrate on myself in the mirror once the steam dies down. I feel like my dream last night aged me. I look for proof on my face—all I find is the same fuzzy upper lip I’ve had all year. My cheek scar stares at me. It tries to remind me how weak I am. I block it out.

When I’m dressed, I find Mom in the kitchen, slicing pickles.

“Do you want to go to McDonald’s for breakfast?” she asks, and I nearly fall over. Lindermans do
not
eat at McDonald’s.

“Seriously?”

“I hear the coffee is better now. It used to be like drinking thinned tar.”

I’m not used to this yet. I’m not sure I can pull off being normal.

Dad used to tell me about the guys at the VFW who could feel their amputated limbs. I feel like one of those guys—wiggling my weak, tortured, pathetic self from only a month ago even though I’ve amputated him.

It’s a little like being two people at once. One minute I feel like the old Lucky who had nothing, and the next minute I realize I have everything I could possibly need.

While I’m in the driveway, I hear the neighborhood kids playing. Normal kids doing normal things. They probably haven’t heard about the Vietnam War. They probably don’t know that as of today more than 1,700 servicemen have still not been accounted for. They probably don’t know that about 8,000 are still missing from Korea, or that approximately 74,000 never surfaced after World War II. They don’t know that amputees sometimes try to wiggle limbs they lost.

I don’t envy them. They have a lot to learn.

Mom orders a Sausage McMuffin with Egg, and I order an original Egg McMuffin with hash browns, and we park in the shade and as we eat, we try to figure out exactly how many laps we’ll have to do to burn the delicious goodness off of our bodies.

When we get to the pool, Mom stuffs her hair into her swim cap and goes straight to the deep end. She waits until I get there and stares down the length of lane three. She says, “How many laps do I have to swim to work off that Sausage McMuffin?”

“A hundred,” I say. “And another twenty for the sweet coffee and half of my hash browns.”

“Wanna race?”

She’s never asked this before. I know I will lose. But I get into position at lane four. She says, “On the count of three. One. Two.
Three!
” and we dive.

The sun hits the water and makes the bottom a mosaic of light. I can see my own shadow, racing through the wet, and I try to catch up with myself. I do not come up for air until I’ve done eight strokes. I picture being chased by a man-eating shark. I breathe to the right so I can’t see Mom. This really isn’t a race. It’s the most fun I’ve had since Ginny dragged me around her shadows at night.

BOOK: Everybody Sees the Ants
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