Stay with Me (14 page)

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Authors: Paul Griffin

BOOK: Stay with Me
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I pull Mack toward the backyard gate.
The first kid slaps a heavy hand onto Mack’s shoulder. “When’d you get out,
Hoss
?”
“How’s that?” Mack says.
I’m gonna kill Marcy. Why does she have to broadcast everybody else’s business? She even blogged about it on her slutty MySpace page,
My Best Friend Is Sleeping With a Convict
.
“You miss it, right, buddy? Getting plowed?”
He’s moving too fast for me to see how he does it, but in less than a second Mack kicks the first idiot into the pool and flips the second one, a kid twice Mack’s weight, onto the pool deck. He drives down at the kid’s throat with his fist.
“Mack!”
He stops, his knuckles hovering above the kid’s Adam’s apple.
“No, baby. Please.”
His hand softens. I grab it and hurry him out. We’re at the street, half the football team catcalling “Oh
Macky,
” and “
No,
baby,
please,
” and “Rump
ranger
.”
He’s wincing, rubbing the back of his head, behind his ears.
“Is it the static?” I say. He told me about it last night.
He pulls me into an alley and holds me by the shoulders and presses into me. He has me up against the wall. He’s kissing me, my neck. He’s shivering, whispering into my ear, “Céce, I’m serious crazy in love with you. I know it’s soo toon—too soon to be saying it, but you don’t have to know somebody forever to know it’s forever. I just need to let you know it, because we already done it, and putting a word to it can only help make it last. You’re my warrant to be here, and I don’t need anybody or anything else. If I ever lost you I’d just fade.”
The rain’s coming down, and I’m unbuckling his belt, and we’re doing it standing up, in the shadows, in the downpour. He keeps telling me he loves me, and even after we’re done he’s still saying it, so I know it’s true.
I want to say it back. I want to say it so bad, but I’m scared. Not here, in the alley. We need to be somewhere safe. Someplace where we can keep our secrets. My house. Tomorrow night. He’s sleeping over. Mack, me, and Boo.
We hurry to the train. He rubs the shivers from my shoulders and kisses the trembling from my lips. We miss our stop. The bus says
Out of Service
.
The gutters are overflowing and the streets are shuttling heavy water, and we take off our sneakers. He doesn’t want me to hurt my feet. He carries me on his back, and we’re laughing all the way uphill. He’s so tall and strong. He glides. He carries me to my door and waits until I’m safe inside. He tells me through the screen door one last time that he loves me, and then he turns and disappears in the rain.
THE FORTIETH DAY . . .
 
(Tuesday, July 21, morning)
 
MACK:
 
Tonight. Her house. In a real bed.
I can’t think of anything else all morning, and my dogs know it. They’re goofing off and nipping at each other and crossing leashes. Boo’s out with me for my morning rounds. After three hours in the heat, she’s done. I bring her up to the roof and water her and pen her, and she’s asleep by the time I turn to lock the hutch door to head out for my afternoon rounds.
I’m off tonight, but Céce’s working. Me and Boo are going to pick her up at the Too at nine. Tuesday nights are usually pretty slow, so Céce should be done with her tables by then. If she’s not, Mrs. V. will cover the last table or two, and then she’s heading down to the shore after all. I can’t figure out if I’m more excited or nervous. I have this weird feeling. I don’t know.
Sky’s crazy, blue then brown, breezy then still, threatening conflagration, like that preacher used to say back when I was a child and my mother took me to church with her all the time to pray for money. Or maybe I heard Vic mumble it over a crossword. Or maybe I overheard Céce saying it, studying for the test between shifts. But somehow I know that word. I wish I didn’t.
I drop off my dogs and collect my pay. I stop at the bodega and grab a six of Sprite for Céce and me, for tonight.
“You want a double bag?” the bodega lady says.
“Triple, if you can spare it,” I say.
“Triple?”
“For my dogs. You know.”
“Of course,” she says, but she doesn’t know what I’m talking about, and why should she?
“To pick up after them,” I say.
“Doesn’t matter,” she says. “I’ll give you four bags if you want.”
“That’d be fine.”
“Here, take five.”
“I’ll rip ’em in half and make ’em ten.”
“Knock yourself out.”
Man, she’s cool.
Everybody’s
cool. This is going to be the greatest day of my life, even better than last night. Tonight I will be in a real nice house with my girl. A home. I grab some flowers, daisies. Tell you what, I’m so excited about being alive, I can’t stop smiling, and doesn’t the bodega lady just smile too? She’s whistling, and I carry her tune with me, out the door, the cowbell jangling like a laugh. I’m lit up just like the sky. Lightning falls all across it like God brushed a wirehaired jackal and pulled the dross from the comb and just tossed it down on us. The elevator’s out again, and I haul the fire stairs for the roof to chill with Boo for a couple of hours before we go pick up Céce. I can’t barely wait till eleven o’clock or so, when I’ll be kissing her long and slow, and we won’t have to worry about anybody happening upon us, like that one time in the park when I was on top of her, and we heard owls hoot, except it was these kids watching from the thickets. But now we’ll have a place to be alone together, for one night anyway. Her lips will be so warm and salty and sweet all at once, and her long hair will be black and shiny against the cool white sheets. It’ll be so quiet, except for the whoosh of cars down on the highway, but even that’ll sound nice because they’re so far away.
My roof’s quiet. Too. With the lightning, you’d think Boo would whimper at least. I unlock the door to the elevator housing. “Heya, girl, wake up.”
The dog is on the floor, on her side.
“Boo, come.”
Man, she’s really out after that all walking.
“Boo?”
Wait, is she . . . She isn’t breathing. I roll her head to me. Her tongue hangs slack and gray. Her eyes are sunk in. Oh, God. Oh, no.
What did I do? Was it too hot in here today? No, the air conditioner is on full blast. Too cold? She’s no pup, but she’s too young to have a heart attack.
Was
too young. Did I walk her too hard this morning? She walked farther and faster and on hotter days. I can’t figure it out, how I killed her.
I ruined it. This is going to mess her up so bad, Céce.
I draw my Boo close to me and cradle her, and aren’t I just lame, whispering to this dead body, petting it. Her limp like this in my arms, I feel it, that she’s not here anymore, and I can’t imagine where she’s gone. It’s all through her, the coming stiffness. The cold.
Then I look over at her water pot, full of bright green liquid. I sniff it. Antifreeze. Dogs go crazy for it. Like a milkshake to them because of the sweet smell. A tablespoon will kill a dog. Boo lapped up a lot more than that. It’s all over the floor. In the window screen is a fresh rip. The glass is chipped out at a low corner. The holes are big enough to funnel through a length of garden hose.
I know what happened. I do. But I just don’t want to let it be real, that a person could do such evil. If that’s part of being human, I don’t want to be a man. Right about now, I’d rather not be.
I can’t help but see it, him, Larry: He waits till I’m gone. He takes out his knife and cuts the screen. He cracks the window with a punch of his blade and bends out the broken bit of pane. He funnels it through, the hose. As he snakes it into Boo’s water pot, he’s gleeful. Maybe he even calls her over with a gentle “Heya, pretty girl” as he lets the antifreeze run. Boo trots over, tail whirling, grateful for the sweet words and the sweeter drink.
He used kindness to cut her down.
I don’t understand killing. How can it be, that killing is natural? That it has to happen? And it does have to happen. It really does now.
This time the static doesn’t pounce. But that doesn’t mean it isn’t strong. It’s the strongest yet, just taking its time to build itself pure. It creeps in, a growing itch to the back of my eyes, until the fingernails dig in hard, and I’m sure my eyes will leak their jelly. I don’t know how long this goes on, me holding Boo, the inside of my head lighting up, the fever taking me from mourning to mad. No, this isn’t mad, what I’m feeling now. This is moving into madness, sure enough. I can’t hear anymore. Just the static, a tornado with ambitions, the kind that’s bitter it wasn’t born a hurricane. Outside the hutch window, the sheets are blowing horizontal. A dark gray one takes leave of the dry line and flies off like the Reaper starved for a fresh soul.
Boo’s body slides out of my lap. After a second, she stills, her legs all wrong, her head like she’d never let it be in life, twisted so strange, like she’s looking back over her shoulder too far, too hard. Her eyes. I think I know the last thing that came to them, the one thing that’s stronger than love, app arently.
The rage swells like a heat blister in my throat, heart, balls. Behind my eyes, just clawed clean now.
I don’t know if I’m being pushed out of the hutch or dragged, but I’m staggering across the roof, down the fire stairs to Larry’s door. I see my fist pounding on it. Like I’m possessed, and I don’t have the will to stop the demon. This isn’t me now.
Larry’s cursing at me from the other side of the door. He’s fading in and out of the hissing noise, but I can just make out that he’s saying, “I warned you I would get that filthy dog. Stinking up my sheets. Jumping around and barking up there. I
warned
you, dirtbag.” He says it over and over, and he’s laughing.
The worst of it is, she was so forgiving, my Boo. Men had wrung her out again and again, forced her to live a life of battle and fear so constant she couldn’t have thought anything but that terror was the natural way of things. And she still had so much goodness spilling from her that she trusted her heart to a man again. To me. She believed in me. And I let it snatch her, the evil. She was sweetness and light, and this Larry is that darkness they say is between the galaxies, nothing out there. He was just made wrong. He can’t be a man. We can’t be the same. But we are. Oh, how we are.
I hammer Larry’s dead bolt lock with a high kick, once, twice, I’m in.
Larry reaches for his baseball bat, mouth wide as his eyes.
The Sprite cans. I spin the bags tight to keep the cans in there real good. And then I walk fast at Larry and swing the six-pack at his face.
He bleeds bad. Spits broken teeth. He’s still holding his bat, but limp, at his side. I slap it from his hand and hit him again with the cans. Bust his nose open.
On his knees, Larry. Looking up at me. I can’t hear anything except the hissing now, but I read his lips: “Please. I’m sorry.”
He sure is, boy, tell you what.
I peel off into my mind’s darker streets and lose myself. I keep hitting him, and hitting him, and hitting him, until the cans explode.
Pink froth everywhere. Then it’s a fast fade to shadows.
I’m sitting on the floor, must be a while later. My teeth click in the prickly hundred-degree heat. I scratch at a bedbug bite on my neck. One of Larry’s cats stares at me from the kitchen counter. She flicks her tail. Another cat licks at the dishes piling the sink. Out the window the clouds are burnt rags.
The sound comes back with the cop’s voice. “Son?”
I hear the echo of little kids laughing, playing chase down in the courtyard.
Blood slicks on the floor. A slug trail from when Larry tried to drag himself to the door. He made it halfway before I finished him.
“Yessir?” I say.
“Put down the bat, son.”
Condo I-beam rising in the distance, ka-
kong
, ka-
kong
.
I see the bat in my hand. Slick. I start to remember it. Chopping at Larry after he was dead.
“Son, do you hear me?”
Church bells.
“Yessir,” I say to that nice cop who three times called me son.
Céce would have stopped me. Just her touch would have been enough.
I’ll never get to be with her again? That can’t be right. She believed in me. She had faith that I was good. How could I let it come between us, the need for the stink of blood in my shirt? How could I let something so cheap one-up my love for her? It’s awful and true: No demon made me do this.
I
did it.
Wanted
to do it. And I still think I was right to do it. That it had to be. I’m the demon?
I was a man, hers, and now I’m nothing.
My hand goes weak, and the bat bangs the sunburnt linoleum and rolls hollow and crooked across the sloped floor. With blood on my hand I touch my forehead, then my heart, left shoulder, right, in the sign of the cross. Then I fold my hands and I pray that Céce will forgive me.

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