Read The City Still Breathing Online

Authors: Matthew Heiti

Tags: #Fiction, #Literary, #Crime, #Literary Collections, #Canadian

The City Still Breathing (3 page)

BOOK: The City Still Breathing
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‘You're acting all weird – what's your damage?'

‘I'm tired.'

‘That's not it.'

Big sigh.
Francie you're such a child.
‘I had to pawn some stuff, okay?'

‘What stuff?'

‘The lens pack, my flash … the Nikon.'

‘Your gear?'

‘Yeah.'

‘But you loved that camera.'

‘Yeah, well I pawned it at Oz's.'

‘Why the hell?' She can feel her voice rising and she catches Lucy giving them a nasty look from a table over.

‘For money – that's why you pawn stuff, Francie.'

‘But we got enough for the trip.'

‘Yeah, for the trip, but that's not enough.' He's been playing with the salt shaker, wiggling it like a little man across the tabletop, like this conversation isn't worth anything. But she grabs his hand and the touch brings his eyes up.

‘Why didn't you pawn your stupid watch then?'

He pulls his hand away and picks at that chintzy gold thing around his wrist. ‘It was my dad's, Francie.'

‘It's not even real.'

‘Francie.'

A dumb thing to say, even she knows it. ‘We gotta get your gear back – we'll just return the money.'

‘Fuck it. Listen, Francie – ' He reaches into his jacket pocket and comes out with a crumpled envelope, and his eyes are no window, but she can see he's going to say something real and true for the first time in forever. But then he looks past her and the envelope disappears back into a pocket.

‘Hey hey hey!' This moment broken by Heck sliding into the booth next to her, already munching away on a slice of bacon he's grabbed from the tabletop. ‘So today's the big day or what?'

‘Where the hell'd you come from?'

Heck pulls at his long hair with bacon-fatted hands, making sure it's smooth down his shoulders, then picks at his bangs. ‘Mom dropped me off.' He takes a sip from Francie's mug, looks at her over the edge. ‘Jeepers, why're you still wearing your jammies?'

Francie pulls her mug away, the handle all coated with grease. ‘How'd you know we were here?'

‘Slim called me.' Something bangs under the table and Heck grabs his knee. ‘Ow, fuck, I mean I saw Slim's car. What the hell'd you kick me with – steel toes?'

Slim flashes his new boots.

‘Where'd you get those?'

‘Yeah, where'd you get those, Slim?'

‘Kicked some guy's ass last night and took em.'

‘Whoa! Didja?'

‘Liar,' Francie says.

‘Didja, Slim?'

Slim just leans back and smiles all mysteriously.

‘Didja go all Macho Man on him?' Heck starts thrashing around, flexing his biceps. ‘Like, ooh yeah!'

‘Shut up, Heck.'

‘Flying elbow drop!'

‘Heck.' Francie cutting in. ‘What're you doin here anyway?'

‘Well, I just wanted to say goodbye. Or whatever … ' He trails off, giving a look around like he's making sure no one's listening, then coming back to Slim. ‘So where is it?'

‘Shut up, Heck.'

‘Where's what?'

‘Oh shit, you didn't tell – '

‘Shut up, Heck.'

‘Tell me what?'

‘Oops.'

‘Nothing.'

‘Yeah, nothing.'

‘Sounds like something.'

‘No it's nothing. Totally nothing. We're not talking about anything.'

‘Shut up, Heck.'

Then there's silence and sitting, Slim looking out the window, Heck at the floor and Francie at everyone, trying to figure out what she should be getting ready to be angry about. Slim sucks his teeth and slides out of the booth. ‘Let's book.'

Heck stuffs the last of the bacon in his mouth, a piece of toast, one more sip of coffee, and then he's out the door after Slim. Francie stuck with the bill.

She focuses on the window – the grey bungalows and grey sky and a few grey snowflakes snaking the grey pavement and grey morning oozing into grey afternoon – everything a grey paste moving by, helping her block out all that silence coming from Slim. Heck chattering away in the back seat, something about a movie he saw at the Odeon, like anyone gives a shit.

All that grey it's a wonder the city doesn't just puke it all up. A big wave right down Highway 69, the Dart riding the front of it all the way to Toronto. All of it giving over to the colour of Yonge Street, the spinning neon of Sam the Record Man, the grey in her sucked out just like that. But instead Slim has them going against it, right back into the ruined heart of the city, back downtown. She cracks her window, lights a menthol and lets the smoke trail out with all the rest of it.

When Slim parks at the end of Durham, she lets him ask twice, ‘You coming?' Her still staring out the window, not saying boo. In the reflection, Slim's forehead set like when his mom talks to him, and she knows she could bitch at him from now until Christmas but it'd just be a waste of good bitching. She lets him get out without asking a third time because her silence is the only weapon she's got against all that forehead.

Heck halfway out the back seat, head flicking between Slim going and Francie staying. ‘You guys.' He laughs, one forced note he swallows before it's done. He plays with the zipper on his ski vest, ahems a few times and then, ‘You got any quarters? I gotta play some Rygar.'

‘What's goin on, Heck?'

‘What? With what? Nothin.'

She angles the rear-view so she can see his face. ‘What's up with him?'

He squirms around in the back seat. ‘I'll just get some quarters inside.'

After he's gone she looks back out the window, Christ the King down at the end of the street, a bit of pale sun coming through, lighting up the big stained-glass rose window in the tower. The first colour she's seen all day.

She changes in the back seat, jeans and her favourite purple Vuarnet sweatshirt, and she's still trying to dig the underwear out of her ass when she gets to the sign, that big monkey grinning down on all the traffic passing by. Top Hat Amusements.

Inside it's all lights and noise – pinball machines and pool tables and arcades and all the other shit she grew out of ages ago. Kids in outfits so lame it'd make you sick, things they were wearing down south like last year. Kids skipping class to go to the arcade, while their parents skip work to go to Elm Town Square or Towers or god knows where, just to get away from something. Each other maybe.

Francie makes for the back where the old ones hang out, past Heck shouting, ‘Fuck, fuck, fuck,' at some cabinet, passing Feldman leaning against a pillar keeping an eye out, and there's Slim lounging at the Moon Patrol tabletop, across from Duncan, who's plucking at his green mohawk. They're just finishing up, Dunc sliding a small vial across and Slim sliding a few bills back.

Before Slim spots her, she ducks into the photo booth, sits on the ripped leather cushion in all that beaver panel. Her fingers find the cool disc of a quarter in her pocket and she thinks, like what the fuck, and drops it down the slot. The machine purrs and then Francie hears Slim's chair slide back and then Dunc's raspy voice.

‘Slim, thought you should know – Milly's comin in from ­Spanish.'

‘Okay.'

‘He's looking for his brother.'

‘Okay, so?'

‘Disappeared a few days ago, just walked straight off the farm, and y'know Lemmy's a fuckin retard, so Milly figures he mighta got himself froze to death.'

‘Bummer.'

‘Yeah, so anyway, word is cops found some dead kid out on 17 last night.'

‘Lemmy?'

‘Dunno, but Milly thinks maybe, so he's comin to make sure. He fuckin loves that kid, practically raised him.'

‘That's a bummer.'

‘Yeah. Anyway, I'm just sayin cause the word is the cops lost the body.'

A shutter click, a flash, and Francie's world is a white sheet.

‘So maybe someone took it or somethin. That's what's goin around anyway – that someone took it.'

Click, flash.

A groan from Slim. ‘Fuckin Heck.'

Click, flash.

‘Yeah, well, anyway, thought you should know. It's gonna look pretty bad for whoever stole that body. Milly sure loved that kid.'

Click, flash. She rubs her eyes. Trying to brush the white spots out.

A clunk and a strip spits out of the machine. Slim walks past the booth, heading back into the mass of brats. Francie grabs the strip, four white squares fading in, and stuffs it into her pocket, slides out of the booth. Dunc leaning over the tabletop, his face lit up by the game like he's telling a ghost story and maybe he is. He flashes her some teeth. ‘Hey, Franc
ine
.'

She gives him the finger and heads for the door, dragging Heck away from his game yelling, ‘Fuck, fuck, fuck,' the whole way.

Back in the car she doesn't bother with the window anymore, she stares straight at Slim. Even Heck shuts up when he feels the air go sour, or he's still sulking about his stupid arcade game. Slim keeps giving her sideways glances and his forehead's softened up. Then they turn off Regent and she finally loses it.

‘Where the fuck are we going?'

‘Just hold on.'

‘I'm not gonna fuckin hold on. We're supposed to be halfway to Toronto but instead we been driving all over the city and I wanna know what the fuck for!'

‘Just one last stop, Francie.'

‘I swear to god, Slim, if we're not on that highway – I swear to fuckin god.'

‘I'll get you there, don't worry, babe.' And it's got to be real bad, because pet names make Slim barf. As some kind of peace offering, he jams the tape back in the eight-track. The vocals kicking in, and
I'm stuck here two years too long
, and Francie thinks ain't that the fuckin truth of it. In the summer this was a love song and now it's a song about this day and yesterday and all the days before. Stuck, stuck, stuck. And then Bernard's voice gets all crunched up as the deck mangles the tape. Francie wrenching it loose.

‘You're gonna wreck it, Francie!' Slim trying to grab the tape from her, but she rolls down her window and tosses it. ‘Fuckin psycho!' He pounds the wheel.

Heck forces one of his stupid pig laughs from the back seat.

‘You guys.'

In the mirror, she watches the magnetic tape unspooling behind them in a big oily ribbon, the tape clattering on the pavement. Francie laughing. Just Married.

Slim swings the car around behind Wembley Public, stopping in the trees down near the metal bridge over the creek. So far past talking, the three of them just watch the water, a shopping cart upended in the middle, brown foam pooling around it.

Slim pulls the vial out of his jacket and spills three blue microdots into his hand. He drops one and passes one back to Heck. The last one to Francie, her holding the blue tab like a bug she might squish. Placing it on her tongue. Dropping this little bit of colour down her throat, down inside her. A little blue into all that grey, like the food colouring her mom used for cake icing. Sometimes a little drop is all it takes. The blue's falling into her and outside the snow is just starting to fall.

Before five minutes have passed, Heck's already rubbing his face. ‘It stinks back here.'

Slim snorts. ‘Because you fuckin blew chunks back there.'

‘It really stinks.' Heck's struggling out of his jacket. ‘And it's hot, like a sauna.' Then he's out the door, rolling around on the gravel.

Francie pulls her legs up on the seat, chin on knees. ‘I don't wanna be dicked around, Slim.'

‘I'm not dicking you around.'

‘You're lying – '

‘I'm not – '

‘ – or you're not telling me something, whatever, I don't even give a shit, I just want to get down south.'

‘What's the big deal? Toronto's nothin special.'

‘It's better than here. There's so much to
do
there.'

‘There's stuff here too.'

‘Like what – hanging out at the arcade? What's up with you, I thought you hated it here too.'

He shrugs. ‘It's okay.'

‘It's not okay – it sucks! I want to do things, I want to be something, and this town is dead. It's dead. You can't be a photographer here.'

‘Who says I can be a photographer anywhere?'

‘Your stuff is so cool, Slim. The way you take people – it's so fuckin cool. Nobody's cool like that.'

‘It's kids' stuff. I'm done with it.'

BOOK: The City Still Breathing
8.05Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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