Reality Boy (21 page)

Read Reality Boy Online

Authors: A. S. King

Tags: #Juvenile Fiction / Social Issues - Violence, #Young Adult, #Juvenile Fiction / Family - Siblings, #Contemporary, #Juvenile Fiction / Social Issues - Bullying, #Romance, #Juvenile Fiction / Boys & Men

BOOK: Reality Boy
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Mom and Tasha were sitting together on the love seat. Ever since the day before, when Mike from two doors down broke up with her, Tasha had been stuck to Mom’s side. The cameras were rolling and the director had already said we should just do the scene and he’d take care of it in the editing room.

“Let’s
stah-t
with Gerald this time,” Nanny said. “I think Gerald’s come a long way, don’t you?”

No one said anything.

“Well, come on, Faust family. Speak up!” Nanny said. “Gerald hasn’t punched a wall in what? More than a year?”

“True,” Dad said. “And he makes his bed every day and gets ready for school and does a lot around the house to clean up. That’s true.”

“That’s right, Doug. He’s come a long way if you think about where we were last year, am I right?”

The director nodded so they all nodded—except Tasha, who just looked like she was going to cry again.

I’d forgotten about punching walls. It was so episode one. I’d become the Crapper since then. Punching walls was for pussies.

“I think Gerald is awesome,” Lisi said. “But I always thought Gerald was awesome.”

Tasha said, “Well, he never crapped on your stuff, so you would.”

We all looked at Tasha and at Mom, who was still stroking Tasha’s hair like she was a prized dog or something. She didn’t seem at all fazed, but then again, I’d crapped on her stuff, too.

The director walked over to us and said, “Look. We have to have this shot by four. It’s three now. You had plenty of time to get all this family stuff out last night. You’ll have forever to continue figuring it out. Can we just concentrate on the positive things that the show did for your family while we were here?”

He wasn’t asking. He didn’t wait for an answer. He just turned around and went back to his chair.

But the mere mention of last night made Tasha’s lower lip curl out and quiver again. I don’t know what they said or did to her, but Mom and Dad had her in Dad’s man cave for over two hours, and then Mom and Dad fought all night long—or at least until I fell asleep.

It was about Mike from two doors down. I know that. I know it because Dad asked me and Lisi some questions before the meeting.
Did Tasha invite him in? Did he ever touch either of you? Are you sure he didn’t have pants on? How long would they be in her room? Please describe the noises you heard, Gerald. Did Tasha have any clothes on? Describe those noises again?

Nanny moved the scene forward. “You two did a
wondah-ful
job of keeping those house rules from my first visit in order. These kids know their chores and their responsibilities,” Nanny said, looking at Lisi. “Which reminds me. I think I
might have a late birthday gift in
he-ah
for you, Lisi,” she said, reaching into a bag behind her and pulling out a wrapped gift.

Lisi sat forward. “Is it okay to open it now?”

“Of course,” Nanny said.

When she opened it and found a set of walkie-talkies, Lisi screamed. We’d wanted them for years and Santa Claus had never brought them for us. She asked Dad to help her get the packaging open and put in the batteries, and then she handed one to me.

“Lisi to Gerald, can you hear me?” she said from the hall.

“I can’t tell. You’re too close,” I said. “Go farther away so I can’t hear you talking.”

A few seconds later, she came through the walkie-talkie’s speaker. “Lisi to Gerald. Come in, Gerald.”

Nanny was smiling. Dad was smiling. I was smiling. I pressed the yellow button on the side of the walkie-talkie. “This is so awesome!”

“Now,” Nanny said. “Gerald, you go off and play with Lisi. I want some time with the rest of the family.”

I nodded and took off full speed toward the basement door, but then I stopped. I stood quietly where I could still hear the conversation and pressed the button on the walkie-talkie so Lisi would be able to hear, too.

“Tasha, I think we’ve talked enough about what happened here with the boy you invited over to the house,” Nanny started. “But what we haven’t talked about is your
behay-vyah
toward your
sis-tah
and
broth-ah
. I’d like to know what you think you can do to improve it.”

I heard Dad sigh.

Tasha said, “I can’t relate to them.”

Mom said, “Lisi and Gerald are just so young compared to Tasha.”

“I’ve met plenty of families who have far larger age gaps and the kids don’t have as much trouble relating to their siblings,” Nanny said. “At least they’re not rude to one another. Tasha, you’re quite rude to your
sis-tah
and
broth-ah
. I’d like to know why.”

I could hear Lisi sniggering upstairs. If she didn’t shut up, we’d be in big trouble.

“They don’t love me,” Tasha said. “Nobody loves me!” She started to sob again.

“That’s silly talk,” Nanny said. “We all love you. And I know being twelve isn’t much fun, but it would be a lot
bett-ah
if you treated people more nicely and thought about them a bit. It’s not that hard, is it?”

I didn’t hear anything for a minute, and then Tasha said, “How can I relate to a retarded kid and a girl who doesn’t do anything but read books? Seriously! I’m a woman now, you know? I have other stuff to think about.”

“Like that—” Dad said. But then he stopped. But I think everyone knew he meant Mike.

“There are no learning-disabled children in this house,” Nanny said. “Everyone here is fine! I could take you into some really difficult homes and then you’d realize how lucky you are. I get so cross when you say these things!”

“She’s right,” Dad said. “Every doctor we’ve taken him to says he’s fine.”

“And another thing,” Nanny said. “You are
not
a woman, Tasha. Not for a while yet. You shouldn’t be thinking you’re a woman.”

Tasha started to cry then. Mom said, “Stop making her feel bad! None of this is Tasha’s fault. She didn’t do anything wrong!”

“Yes, she did,” Dad said. “She brought a boy into this house and—and—you know!”

Mom said, “Nothing bad came from it, Doug.”

“He could have robbed us. Could have hurt Lisi. Could have done worse things than what he did,” Dad said. “And what he did was bad enough. For Christ’s sake, she’s
twelve
!”

There was twenty seconds of silence. Tasha let out a few more sobs and Nanny told her to go to her room, so she did.

“Jill,” said Nanny. “Look at me. You have to do something about your own
behay-vyah
. Everyone else here has changed, but you haven’t changed. Gerald makes his bed every single morning. Lisi isn’t any trouble. Even Doug does more around the house and has tried to help you through this. But it’s really up to you now.”

There was silence. Then Mom spoke. I think she was crying.

“When I was pregnant with Lisi—she was—you know. A surprise,” she said. “I didn’t think I could love another child as much as I loved Tasha. Tasha has her problems, I know, but I’m her mother. But—I mean, how can you have that much love for
two
of them? I just didn’t think I had it. A lot of women feel this way. I’ve read articles about it,” she said. “And
Doug was working all the time, so it was just the two of us. But then Lisi was born and I didn’t feel anything for her at all.”

This is when I switched the red button on the side of the walkie-talkie to
OFF
. If Lisi was still listening, then I didn’t want her to hear that.

“I tried,” Mom said. “I mean, I really tried. But I didn’t have the patience for all that baby stuff anymore. The diapers. The spitting up. The night feeding. Doug? Do you remember? She never stopped crying.”

He said, “Jill had a little breakdown. Or two.” He sighed. “And Tasha didn’t like being left out, either.”

“And then, just as I’d potty trained Lisi, there was Gerald. God,” Mom said. Then she started
really
crying. “It’s normal for families to try again for a boy. Everyone said things to Doug about it. Like we had to keep going for our boy! And look at what we got. Look at
that boy
.”

I didn’t need to hear any more. The way she talked about Lisi and me… was like we were pets, but without the whole reason you get pets.

I was stuck in the kitchen. If I made a move, they’d know I was there. So I stood still and tried not to listen as Dad explained Mom’s trips to the shrink and how their marriage suffered.

I could hear Bony Nanny give Mom a hug. It was like a skeleton wind chime. “There’s still time,” Nanny said. “Just because they’re six and eight doesn’t mean it’s too late. Tasha needs more discipline and those two just need love.”

“They’ll never love me,” Mom said. “And I don’t blame them.”

When I heard this, I realized something. I was six, but I realized it and I shoved that realization deep down until I was old enough to handle it.

That realization: Her love was a lie, just like everything else.

The day I’d be old enough to handle it: my seventeenth birthday.

PART
THREE
44

ON MY SEVENTEENTH
birthday, I wake up thinking of Hannah. Not in that way. Okay, yeah, in that way, too. I almost told her I loved her last night on our way home from work. Our drives from the PEC Center the last few nights have been fun. We play loud music and Hannah sings. Over the weekend, we stopped at the baseball lot again and we lay on the field and looked at the stars. On Monday we stopped at the McDonald’s and ate hot caramel sundaes. Last night, she was eating a long string of black licorice and she smiled at me in this way I can’t explain. I had to remind myself not to go too fast. It’s only been, like, two weeks.
She’s not gonna love you back, Crapper. No one has yet.

When I get downstairs, there’s a card on the kitchen table for me in a blue envelope and it says
Gerald
on the front of it. Next to that is my lunch. Mom isn’t around and I can’t hear any rodent-reproduction noise from the basement, and I know Dad left at six today, because I heard him leave as I was getting up. So I grab my lunch and the card and stuff both into my backpack.

Happy birthday, Gerald.

Picking Hannah up for school this week has made my mornings earlier and berry-scented. We have to be in school by eight, but I pick her up at 7:15 so we have time together. She meets me at the end of her long driveway and we take off toward the back roads.

“Happy birthday!” she says.

“Thanks,” I say. “What’d you get me?”

“I like that shirt,” she says.

“Thanks. I got it at the mall this weekend.”

“It’s sexy.”

“Don’t start,” I say.

“Right. Rule number five. I remember now.” As she says this, she puts her hand on my leg. Near the knee. But still, it stirs me. She started doing this two nights after she cleaned the
ASSHOLE
off my dashboard.

“You know what I like about you?” she asks.

I don’t say anything.

“You’re a mystery, Gerald. I have no idea what you’re thinking most of the time and I can’t tell when you’re here and when you’re not here.”

“I’m here,” I say. “I’m driving the car.”

“But the mystery part of it. I like that,” she says. “Like—I’m the junkman’s daughter and everybody knows that and it makes me easily recognizable. People see me and they think
junk
. They don’t have to talk to me unless they crashed their car and they need a passenger’s-side door for a 2001 Honda or something, you know?”

I laugh through my nose a little, because she’s overlooking that I’m Gerald the Crapper. People see me and they think
crap.

“See? Like just then. You thought something but you didn’t say it. Mysterious.”

“Just driving. To school, remember?”

“Let’s skip!”

“School?”

“School
and
work. Why the hell not? Let’s get out of here for the day and go somewhere exciting.”

“Which would be?”

“I don’t know. How about Philly? It’s only two hours. We could walk arm in arm and catch an arty movie or something. Eat street-vendor hot dogs.”

“That sounds nice,” I say. I think of my Gersday Snow White guidance counselor. “But I should really go to school.”

“Not so mysterious now.”

“School’s important at the moment.”

“Unsexiest statement ever.”

I sigh. “Can I ask you something?”

“Duh.”

“Why do you want to run away so bad? I understand the junkman’s daughter problem and all that, but is that it?”

“Is that it?” she says. “Dude. I am the original Cinderella. I cook. I clean. I wash. I scrub the fuckin’ mildew out of the tiles in the shower. All the time, I’m cleaning shit.
Their shit.
I literally have cleaned up
their shit
. It’s disgusting.” She gestures wildly. “On top of that, I work and have to deal with all those hockey creeps at the PEC Center and go to school with a bunch of wankers. Seriously. Why would anyone want to stay?”

“Sorry.”

“Eh. Life just sucks right now. Things will get better when Ronald gets home.” Ronald’s her brother. The one in Afghanistan.

“How so?” I ask.

“Well, as long as he doesn’t come home in a bag, then my mother might get off her ass again. That would be a start.”

We drive the rest of the way to school in silence. Content-birthday silence. Looking-out-the-window silence. Ignoring-the-lingering-pain-in-my-week-old-maybe-broken-ribs silence. When we pull into the parking lot and into my spot, she unzips her backpack and pulls out a small, wrapped CD-size box and a small card. “Don’t open them until I’m gone,” she says. Then she zips her backpack up and gets out of the car and walks into school.

I open the present first. It’s a CD she made with a really classy-looking cover that says
Songs That Make Me Think of Gerald, by the Junkman’s Daughter
. I know I don’t have enough
time to listen to it now, so I stick it in the glove compartment and open the card.

Her tiny writing—perfected from years of writing in her tiny book, I presume—lines the entire interior of the card and I realize I don’t have time to read it now, either. But some words catch my eye as I close it. In the bottom right-hand corner, I see them. There’s something about those words that forms a recognizable shape. Even in tight, tiny printing, which is how she writes. Then I close the card and stick it in the glove compartment along with the CD.

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