The Good Kind of Bad (19 page)

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Authors: Rita Brassington

BOOK: The Good Kind of Bad
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‘Evan . . .’

‘Too many questions?’

‘Something like that.’ I couldn’t wait in Evan’s apartment while he went to work. Now my strength had returned, and even with the hangover, my head was clear enough to know it was a terrible idea. I appreciated the help, but I had to leave. I had a life to sort out. If I wasn’t going to sit around for Joe, then I certainly wasn’t for Evan.

I was about to fabricate some five-star excuse when I heard a familiar ringtone. It was my phone, in my jacket pocket, the one Evan said he’d stashed in the hall cupboard. Hurrying down the hall, I just prayed it wasn’t Joe calling.

‘Hey, you okay?’ Evan shouted after me.

Sure enough, hung on the back of the cupboard door was my leather jacket, stiff with dried blood. Tentatively reaching into the pocket and pulling out my phone, the call was from Ted Travis, South Evergreen’s building maintenance Super. I breathed out my relief, carrying my phone, and jacket, back down the hall.

Taking a deep breath, I chirped, ‘Hey, Ted.’

‘Don’t hate me for ringing so early,’ Ted chewed in his distinctive Arkansas twang.

‘It’s not early, what’s up?’ Back in the lounge, I momentarily turned to the window, Evan’s eyes boring through me as I did.

‘We’ve had another incident with Joe. I heard he tried setting fire to your apartment last night, and the hallway, hell, the damn entire building it seemed. He was rambling some kind of money nonsense and was blind drunk. I’m sorry, but they called the cops. He was banging around in there all night. I know he’s your husband and all but that man is bad news. I’m just glad you weren’t there.’

‘They arrested him?’

That spiked Evan’s attention. He was silently mouthing something at me, but I couldn’t make it out.

‘Far as I know, he’s still down at the station.’

We talked a little longer before I thanked Ted and hung up. Nothing surprised me as far as Joe was concerned anymore.

‘What was that about?’ Evan asked, tying up his gown.

‘They called the cops to the apartment.’

‘What?’

‘Joe decided to set fire to the place,’ I retorted, while slipping on my jacket and brushing it down. At least the colour hid the blood.

‘Fire? Wow, wait. What are you doing? You’re not leaving. You can’t.’

‘Everything I own is at South Evergreen, Evan. I need my stuff. Or what’s left of it.’

‘Aren’t you forgetting the guy is goddamn
dangerous
? Not to mention the whole fire starter thing.’

‘Evan, he’s locked up. Ted said they took him to the station, that he’s still down there.’

‘Ted? Who’s Ted? And which station?’

‘I don’t know! He just said he’s down at one.’

‘Did he mention a case number? Say who the arresting officers were?’

‘I don’t know ‒ no. He didn’t. Look, Evan, this is my only chance. When else will I get another like it? I need my things and Joe’s not there.’ It wasn’t rocket science. No Joe meant I was free to go back. If five minutes after meeting was all it took for Joe to propose, then five minutes was all I’d need to erase him from my life.

‘I’m checking this out,’ Evan muttered, shaking his head and pulling his phone from his dressing gown pocket.

‘What do you mean?’

‘I mean, I’m not letting you go back home by yourself until I know where he is.’

‘He’s at the police station!’

‘Says who?
Ted
?’ Evan began tapping the screen but again looked at the clock. ‘I’m already on report, I can’t be late,’ he mumbled to himself. ‘Look, here’s what we’ll do. You wait here until my shift finishes at one, then we’ll go together, and then once you get your stuff you’re welcome to stay here. I insist even.’

‘Evan, I appreciate the offer but . . .’

‘You need to start letting people help you. You can’t do this on your own, like you deserve to be punished. He’s done wrong by
you
, don’t forget that. I’ll charge you if it’ll make you feel better. Promise you’ll think about it?’

As Evan left for the shower, I spent all of two seconds thinking about it. I crept into the hall ‒ his keys dangled from the lock in the front door. Sliding past the bathroom where he was murdering AC/DC’s ‘Back in Black’
(probably accompanied by air guitar), I quietly opened the front door.

 

Outside, on the right side of town, the morning air was crisp. Trying not to look back at Evan’s building, hoping he wasn’t watching from the window, I realised there was a comforting loneliness in the stillness of the windy city, with only shadows behind the town house doors and drawn curtains in the bay windows. It was their exposed illusion of safety: one single pane of glass.

I caught a cab at the corner of West Superior Avenue and North State by the church. Although I must’ve been thirty blocks from home, meaning the fare soon surpassed my pocket change, it fast became the most uncomfortable taxi journey of my life, mostly due to the driver staring me out.

‘Is there a problem?’ I asked, after the head shaking got out of hand.

His fat arms bulged out of a red lumberjack shirt while his piggy eyes narrowed to slits. He didn’t look like he’d ever had hair. ‘You sure you can pay this, lady?’

‘Pay what? The fare?’

‘What else?’

I frowned. ‘And why wouldn’t I?’

‘I don’t want no trouble.’ In the rear-view mirror, he arched an eyebrow at me.

‘And you won’t get any.’

‘Really? Because your face says trouble to me.’

I laughed. He’d purposefully taken me the long way across town, and now he’d pulled up by the Won Kow restaurant on Wentworth, still five blocks from South Evergreen.

‘Come on, we’re nearly there. I might be a
little
short, but . . .’

He chuckled to himself, half turning in his seat. ‘It’s always the same story with you girls.’

‘Excuse me?’


I had a bad day, he took all my money
, blah freakin’ blah. Like you don’t make enough from those mugs uptown. What happened to your face? Were you a bad girl for your daddy? Short-changed him like you were gonna me?’

It felt like I was going to vomit in my mouth. ‘Who do you think I am?’

‘I think you’re riding from River North to the South Side at seven in the morning. Wealthy Friday night clients don’t pay peanuts, and you’re telling me you don’t have cash? You want to rethink that?’

‘You think I’m a
hooker
?’

‘If the face fits, and yours sure does, darlin’.’

I ticker-taped what notes I had at him and climbed out, adding a few obscenities as I went.

‘You never heard of a tip?’ I heard him shout through the window before he screeched away.

What do you know? There was nothing like a face full of fists to stop the scumbags trying to get into your pants.

Still five blocks from home, I wandered over the wide avenues and vacant parking lots of Chinatown, crisscrossing the South Chicago street grid until my stumbling mess of a walk quickened and I was about ready to collapse. It was then I glimpsed the street sign. I was on South Evergreen, facing my apartment block. Now here, it was the last place I wanted to be, though I was starting to feel whatever I did and wherever I turned, I’d never escape my fate.

I wasn’t half as strong as I’d believed back at Evan’s. Maybe this hadn’t been the best idea. Looking up at the building, and even though I knew Joe wasn’t up there, I still couldn’t do it.

I put my back to the apartment and walked away, but not for long. Forcing myself to stop, I scolded myself. I was stronger than running away. My purse, money, credit cards, passports . . . everything I owned was up there. I wouldn’t get another chance like this. Joe was out of reach. It’d take five minutes, tops. In, out, done. Next life please, and pronto. He could have his slut.

I crossed the road, pulled on the door handle and climbed the stairs.

The apartment was vacant apart from a frightened Sybil peering out from behind a cupboard. Judging by the crumbs around her chops, she’d found and raided the hallowed dog biscuit tin. A visual survey of the kitchen revealed scattered pizza boxes, dirty plates, empty cans, but no smoke damage. Rumours of a fire had been greatly exaggerated, though judging by the mess it looked like Joe had partied the night away, either with Bakery Bitch or some other
fille de joie
.

I spent a good minute staring at myself in the kitchen mirror, pulling at the skin to analyse my wounds. No wonder Mr Sleaze Ball Lumberjack thought I was a prostitute. The borrowed skin-tight jeans weren’t helping matters either.

And then I heard it, the hushed rattling from the lounge. I instinctively grabbed the broom from beside the cooker and held it at arm’s length, otherwise known as the lamest weapon in history. Why didn’t I own a gun? Why didn’t Joe? Or maybe he still did. This was America, land of the free. Firearms were a rite of passage. All I could hope to do with my weapon was threaten the intruder with housework. Though I knew there was no intruder. I knew who was in there.

Unsuitably armed and after tightening my grip, I pushed open the door.

Entering the lounge, I walked into a forgotten dream. There was Joe, bones shuddering as his hand reached for the vodka. His arms hugged to quell the shaking and his wounded animal whimpers were pathetic as the chin jutted out, failing to catch his cigarette before it fell to the floor. Arrest? There’d been no arrest. It didn’t look like he’d left the apartment. How could Ted have got it so wrong?

The dark room was partially demolished. Broken porcelain littered the boards, surely smashed up in his rage. Sprawled over the floor, Joe’s bloodshot eyes held my gaze, the same grey T-shirt smeared with blood. The way serial killers kept a lock of hair or piece of jewellery, it was a memento to relive his heinous crime, a souvenir to forever cherish.

The shards of glass glistened like a thousand diamonds, a minefield impervious to penetration. For one terrible moment I assumed the worst, though on second thought, maybe the
worst
wasn’t such a bad thing.

As I edged closer he spoke, quiet and slow.

‘I thought you were dead,’ Joe recounted, his voice thickened by the liquor. His stare remained constant, a blank gaze into nothing. ‘I passed out. I went to look for you, saw the blood on the sidewalk but you weren’t there, I couldn’t see you.’ He paused for a moment, still not daring to look at me, not right in the eye. ‘I need to tell you some things. I need to tell you. I have to make things right between us, baby. I’m going to take an anger management class. I feel sick about what I did. You have to believe me. I know I need to change, I do. I hate the person I’ve become. It’s not me. I guess what I’m trying to say is ‒ I’m sorry.’

Even though I’d heard it before, the empty apologies and insincere promises, this time I was surprised to hear them. This wasn’t what I’d expected. Now facing the man who’d caused so much hurt, I could hardly believe it. Weakened by his addiction and visibly in pain, he appeared so fragile, so alone. In his company I was no longer afraid, just brimming with pity. He was as dangerous as a two-year-old with a toy gun, a pathetic, wheezing, dribbling wreck, all heavy breathing and beads of sweat.

That said, it didn’t mean I had to forgive him. ‘You beat me up, cheat on me, lie, and now you’re
sorry
? If only I’d walked past you in Galvin’s, if only I’d laughed at you on one knee. It wasn’t clever or cute; you weren’t my destiny
or
fate. You didn’t mean it. You don’t love me. You had too many Jägermeisters, that’s all.’

‘I do love you.’

‘You love yourself.’

‘I’ll get help, I swear. You need to give me another chance, to give
us
another chance. I won’t mess up this time. I need one more kick at it, one more. We can be happy again.’

Joe’s face filled with remorse, his eyes as innocent as a child’s, but I’d seen that look before.

‘I’ll see you in court, all right, Joe?’

‘Court? No, baby, you can’t. You can’t have gone to the cops. I will lose
everything
. They’ll lock me up forever. Please, baby. I’m your husband. You cannot do this to your husband. I’d die without you.’

‘And you can’t do this to your
wife
! You treat me worse than your damn dog and now you want to carry on like nothing’s happened? Don’t tell me you’ve changed, that you’re running for South Evergreen’s Man of the Year, that you’d never . . .’ I reached above my eye. ‘I can’t keep running back after every new drama. This life? You? It’s over. I’m going.’

And then, it was like a switch flipped, the pitiful stare becoming something altogether more twisted. His eyelids dropped and a sneer grew.

‘Why’d you come back? Why come back if you’re
going
? Maybe you should ask yourself why you’re already by my side like a loyal little bitch? You proved me right. I wouldn’t have had to hit you if you weren’t such a pathetic whore.’

It didn’t matter what he said. He couldn’t hurt me anymore. Now when I looked there was no mystery and charm, there wasn’t even a threat; only a pathetic oaf of a man lying limp like a jellyfish over the living room floor.

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