How Are You Going to Save Yourself

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How Are You Going to Save Yourself Page 1

by JM Holmes




  The characters and events in this book are fictitious. Any similarity to real persons, living or dead, is coincidental and not intended by the author.

  Copyright © 2018 by JM Holmes

  Cover design by Lucy Kim

  Cover copyright © 2018 Hachette Book Group

  Hachette Book Group supports the right to free expression and the value of copyright. The purpose of copyright is to encourage writers and artists to produce the creative works that enrich our culture.

  The scanning, uploading, and distribution of this book without permission is a theft of the author’s intellectual property. If you would like permission to use material from the book (other than for review purposes), please contact [email protected]. Thank you for your support of the author’s rights.

  Little, Brown and Company

  Hachette Book Group

  1290 Avenue of the Americas, New York, NY 10104

  littlebrown.com

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  facebook.com/littlebrownandcompany

  First Edition: August 2018

  Little, Brown and Company is a division of Hachette Book Group, Inc. The Little, Brown name and logo are trademarks of Hachette Book Group, Inc.

  The following stories previously appeared, sometimes in different form, in these publications: “Everything Is Flammable” in the Gettysburg Review; “Kinfolk” in H.O.W.; “The Legend of Lonnie Lion” in the Missouri Review; “What’s Wrong with You? What’s Wrong with Me?” in the Paris Review; and “Cookouts” in The White Review.

  Lyrics on the first and last pages of “Toll for the Passengers” are from “Sing About Me, I’m Dying of Thirst” by Kendrick Lamar Duckworth, Gabriel Stevenson, Derrick Hutchins, Quincy Jones, Alan Bergman, and Marilyn Bergman; the lines of poetry about gunfire in “Outside Tacoma” are from “Someday I’ll Love Ocean Vuong” by Ocean Vuong, from Night Sky with Exit Wounds; and the Nina Simone lyrics in “Kinfolk” are from “Feeling Good” by Anthony Newley and Leslie Bricusse.

  The publisher is not responsible for websites (or their content) that are not owned by the publisher.

  The Hachette Speakers Bureau provides a wide range of authors for speaking events. To find out more, go to hachettespeakersbureau.com or call (866) 376-6591.

  ISBN 978-0-316-51487-3

  LCCN 2018931946

  E3-20180723-DA-NF

  Table of Contents

  Cover

  Title Page

  Copyright

  Dedication

  What’s Wrong with You? What’s Wrong with Me?

  The Legend of Lonnie Lion

  Be Good to Me

  Toll for the Passengers

  Kinfolk

  Outside Tacoma

  Everything is Flammable

  Dress Code

  Cookouts

  Acknowledgments

  About the Author

  Newsletter

  For the dearly beloved ghosts

  How many white women you been with?”

  The room was filled with good smoke and we drifted off behind it.

  “What’s your number?” Dub looked at Rye real serious like he was asking about his mom’s health.

  I leaned forward from the couch and took the burning nub of joint from his outstretched hand. We called him Dub because his name was Lazarus Livingston—double L. His parents named him to be a football star. He could play once upon a time, but not like Rye.

  Rolls, who was too high, chimed in: “Stop it, bruh, that shit’s not important.”

  “Yeah, it is. I’m finna touch every continent,” Dub said.

  “White’s not a continent,” Rolls said.

  “You know what I mean.”

  “I know you never won a geography bee,” Rolls said.

  The room was streaked with haze like we dropped cream in a coffee, but Rolls never cracked any windows. He smoked like a pro even still, burned blunts and let the smoke box out the room. He had the leather furniture from his dad’s old office at the camera shop and we sank into it. His new place was nice, on the north end of Blackstone but before you hit the old-money houses on the east side of Providence. These days, he got lit every morning before work, after his bowl of Smacks. His latest gig was shooting an ad for the ambulance chaser Anthony Izzo. I was about to ask him if he still painted.

  “Why won’t you answer the question?” Dub continued. “Gio would answer.” He looked at me. “Wouldn’t you, G?”

  “Don’t play this game,” I said.

  “How many?”

  “Man, G don’t count,” Rye said. “He’s mixed—that’s a performance-enhancing drug.” He tagged me light on the chest.

  “He speaks!” Dub said.

  “Shut the fuck up,” Rye said.

  “Chill with that,” Rolls said. “My place is a sanctuary.”

  “Stop with the Buddhist bullshit,” Dub said.

  I put the joint out. Rye started rolling another.

  Rolls stood but put his hand on the armrest to steady himself. “It’s Brahman,” he said.

  “Brah—shut-the-fuck-up,” Rye said.

  Rolls smacked his lips and looked at Rye. “You two belong together,” he said. “I’m getting a drink.”

  “Get me one,” I said.

  Rolls wiped his eyes and left to the kitchen.

  “Really, though, why you being shy?” Dub nudged Rye. Their huge frames looked goofy on the couch together, boulders sinking into the leather, jostling each other like idiots.

  “Nigga, stop, I’m rolling. You’ll ruin the J.”

  “My Gawd! You’ve never fucked a white chick.”

  “Don’t be stupid.”

  “You haven’t.”

  Rye began licking the edges and shaking the cone down.

  “Don’t pack it too tight,” I said.

  “Madie teach you that?” Rye said.

  Rye knew I didn’t roll well, but my girl rolled Js better than him and Rolls. She kept the J loose enough to pull well but tight enough not to burn sloppy or canoe. I loved watching her manicured fingers at work. The first time I brought her back to the city and showed her the spots, she rolled our weed and talked above us, underneath us, and around us. My boys cracked jokes and looked out for her. They treated her like a long-lost, porcelain-colored cousin. She said our outdoor weed was garbage. We called it middies. She called it schwag. Both equated to “trash.” Rye said that Madie was the first woman he ever bought a drink for, but I’d seen his lying ass spend money on chicks in high school.

  Madie liked the area so much that she decided to live there when she got a finance job offer in Foxborough a few years later. The commute was about twenty minutes, but she said the money saved on rent was worth it. I didn’t buy it. She wanted to prove she could hang.

  “That’s one hell of a white girl,” Rye said.

  “Don’t change the subject. We’re talking about you,” I said.

  “How is the old lady?” Dub said.

  “Nah, this about him,” I said.

  Dub pulled on his nose the way he did when he was thinking of some heinous shit. “I just wanna know how the treads are,” he said.

  “Yeah, how’s it hittin’?” Rye said.

  I leveled my eyes at him. “Don’t talk about my girl like that.”

  “Stop being soft,” Dub said.

  “He’s Team Light-Skinned,” Rye said. “Let him be.”

  “You’re a fucking macadamia nut,” I said.

  They both were silent a second, then started laughing.

  “Y’all are stupid,” I said.

  “Sing me a love song, Urkel,” Dub said.

  Rye looked away. Rolls returned and handed me my drink. It tasted l
ike straight Coke and I told him.

  “Strength is life, weakness is death,” he said.

  “Man, I don’t even know why we come here,” Rye said.

  “’Cause you’re scared of your landlord.” Rolls took the joint from him.

  “Gandhi’s got jokes,” Rye said.

  Rye’s landlord was a fat Irishman with an absurdly thick neck. He didn’t mind Rye moving in because he remembered watching him take the team to a state football title back in the day. Now Rye kept his music low and entered the house without switching on the stair light when he came home real late. We could never smoke at his spots, even growing up. At his mother’s house, we couldn’t smoke because she’d wake up and press us for some. Rye would pretend it didn’t bother him, but she’d start wringing her hands and glancing around because she wanted more than trees, and I would stick my head in the fridge and pretend there was something there to look at.

  “My boy’s not scared of that fat-ass mick,” Dub said. “But he’s clearly scared of white pussy.”

  “Let it rest,” I said.

  “Fear is at the center of all hate,” Rolls said.

  “You’re smoked out,” Dub said.

  Rolls passed me the joint and got up to throw on a track. In middle school, Rye and I used to bump Dipset, wasting our freshman highs on rap with one dimension—sped-up drums, pitch-altered samples chopped up and arranged to bang like gunshots. We would smoke weed in my aunt Mary’s basement because she worked a lot and was hardly home. We sprayed air freshener and enjoyed the cool mist on our skin as we walked through and back in a daze. She never came down even when she was home, but we sprayed it anyway.

  One day, Rye left upstairs to go to the bathroom and didn’t come back. I waited awhile, letting the minutes bend around me and grow fat as I climbed into the high. I thought I heard a door shut. I sprayed more, thinking it was my aunt, home early for some reason. I tripped up the stairs, boots heavier than usual. No one was in the kitchen–living room. There were some orange peels. Rye always ate my food. He said football players needed the calories. I wondered if he’d gone to 7-Eleven for more snacks, but his coat was still on the counter. I went by the bathroom—door open, fan still on. Computer room—empty, but the computer was loading. I sat down to see what recruiting videos he was watching, but after a minute, he hadn’t returned. I went into the hall. My aunt’s door was open. I went to bust in and scare the shit out of him but came up quiet inside my high. In the room, he moved around slow, stopping by her dresser and studying the pictures. He picked up one of her standing next to her flavor of the year, Luca, on a beach in Rio. She looked tan in her purple bikini. Rye stared for a while. Then he reached his hand to open the top drawer of the dresser.

  “What the fuck!” I said.

  Rye was so shook he banged his knee on the shelf. “Shit!” he said. “Why you sneaking up on me?”

  “The fuck you doing?”

  “I got lost,” he said.

  “You’re not that high.”

  He sat on the bed, rubbing his knee.

  I gestured at the drawer. “That shit is weird,” I said.

  He stood and set the photograph upright again. Paused. “She’s sexy, man.”

  I slapped him on the back of the head. He made like he was going to tag me in the chest. I flinched. I made like I was going to tag him back. He flinched too.

  “She got those green eyes,” he said.

  “Fuck’s wrong with you?”

  He paused like the question was philosophical. “I been conditioned,” he said.

  I cut my eyes at him. “Don’t—”

  “My conditioning has been conditioned.” He smirked.

  “Ya funny,” I said. I didn’t feel like picking up what he was putting down and looked at my aunt’s pictures, then out the window instead.

  ROLLS CRANKED UP the Impressions—So people get ready, for the train to Jordan. I loved that song, but I was surprised Rye and Dub let it ride. Years ago, Dub would’ve cut it off and tried to convince us to hit the clubs on Westminster, but we’d have wound up at a house party with jungle juice and dancehall playing instead. Now, we got higher and thought ahead to Thanksgiving, about chopping it up with whatever family we had left.

  Rolls had his attempts at abstract art hung on the walls. Maybe it was the smoke, or the way the red, green, and white paint seemed to pop over the black roofing material, but the work was actually beautiful, balanced.

  “He won’t tell us ’cause he ain’t been with any,” Dub said.

  “How many have you been with?” Rye said.

  “Too many to count.” Dub smiled.

  “Stop lyin’.”

  “I like to take ’em in the shower.” Dub grinned. “Let ’em bathe me,” he said.

  “You watch too much porn,” I said.

  “I even had this one, Cici, after she finished washing me, she hit me with the Eddie Murphy line.”

  “Bullshit,” Rye said.

  “Real talk. She said, ‘The royal penis is clean, Your Highness.’”

  “You’re lyin’,” Rye said.

  “Why would I lie?”

  “You add to the mischief of the world,” Rolls said.

  I liked to wash Madie’s hair when we were in the shower together. The way it trapped water and became heavy satin in my hands. It went all the way down to her lower back. She thought mine was waterproof. Her shampoo smelled of sweet citrus and vanilla. She let her hair air-dry in the kitchen while she made steel-cut oats with flax for breakfast. I drenched the hippie shit in syrup and told her how good it was.

  “Yeah, aight,” Rye said.

  “I just treat ’em how they wanna be treated. Choke the daddy issues out of ’em. If they want me to play Dominican, I let ’em call me Papi. Anything but gentle. Long as you know that, you’re straight.”

  “Lyin’ ass—” Rye started.

  “Don’t be mad at me,” Dub said. “You should really do better for yourself. You played ball.”

  “I’ve fucked white women,” Rye said.

  “Then just tell us how many.”

  “I’m out if you don’t stop,” I said.

  Rye took a deep pull from his drink. It wasn’t his pace.

  “You ain’t gotta be mad. We ain’t talkin’ about Madie,” Dub said.

  When Dub and I used to slap-box in high school, Rye would always break it up before we close-fisted each other. Dub said I was too pretty to throw hands anyway. I told him his bulky ass was too slow to fade me. He’d say, Light-skins bruise like fruit.

  “You think she been keeping herself pure for you?” Dub said.

  “Easy, Dub,” Rolls said.

  “You think some big motherfucker ain’t coming around to hit it right while you’re not here.”

  I stood up. Dub leaned forward.

  “And you think Simone faithful to your lame ass?” I said.

  He brushed some ash off his long leg. “Keep my girl’s name out your mouth.”

  “Dub, fall back,” Rolls said.

  I kept my eyes locked on Dub. “Who’s whipped now?” I said.

  The music changed tracks and went on. Old Cole.

  “Nigga, you sweet—”

  I slapped the joint out of his mouth before he could finish. He was halfway up when Rye grabbed him in a bear hug, there on the couch. Dub threw his elbows a few times trying to break free.

  “Calm down,” Rye said. “Calm down.”

  “Nah, this nigga thinks his girl isn’t community property. It’s a revolving door when you ain’t around, Captain Save-a-Ho. You the only nigga that kiss that bitch on the mouth.”

  I tried to get close enough to swing, but Rolls had gotten up and was standing in the way.

  “Calm the fuck down,” Rye said. “Leave,” he said to me.

  “Fuck that—”

  “I know niggas that piped!” Dub said.

  I lunged and swung at his face, but at the last moment Rolls tried to step in front and tripped on the table. My knu
ckles landed on the side of his jaw. I felt the connection like when the baseball hits the sweet spot of the bat—it caves with a softness. Rolls fell against Rye, then into the couch. Blood already outlined his teeth. Rye and Dub still struggled. I didn’t know whether to apologize or keep swinging. I felt like I was in a pool of water and my limbs were weak and slow. Then Rolls kicked me in the shin with his heel.

  “Go!” he said. “Get the fuck out.”

  IT WAS COLD out and leaves scratched down the block. Rye said that Rolls was fine. We were faded. The night was dark. We headed toward East Ave. Back toward Rye’s. It wasn’t rough like Prospect Heights, where he came up, but he still wanted a nicer place where he and his girl, Marissa, could live together. Rye stumbled a little bit, leaving the glow of the orange streetlight and falling into shadow for a moment.

  “I haven’t had an empanada in a while,” I said.

  “Yeah,” he said, “you’ve been gone a minute.” His voice sounded far off. A car wheeled by with windows rattling.

  “So were you.”

  Rye stopped, burped, and let it out into the night like dragon fire. He took a quick right into the backstreets. I tripped a little trying to follow him.

  “Forget the shortcuts?” he said.

  Stefano’s yellow awning came up on the right, a high man’s beacon to buñuelos and ramen hot enough to peel the weed film off our tongues—that was high school. The inside smelled the same as always—grease and incense. The baked goods in the case had gone cold, but if you told them you were going to eat it then, they fired it up hot for you. I got two chicken empanadas and a potato one for Rye. He thought they filled you up more. The man behind the counter was too tall for his job. He threw the goods in the toaster and turned the knob, then went back to his magazine.

  “Drew still work here?” I asked.

  He looked up. “Who?”

  We stared at each other for a moment. “Forget it,” I said, but he was back in the pages.

  I thought about getting a strawberry soda. My tongue felt thick. I eyed the Game wraps and thought about when we’d cut class to smoke in Slater Park—hotbox the car, then get the five-dollar special at East Buffet while the Chinese workers eyed us like we were going to dine-and-dash on them.

 

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