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Luna Rising

Page 35

by Selene Castrovilla


  came

  back. It’s like we’re paused

  we’re all on

  pause whenever

  Pop

  comes

  home.

  We ain’t putting down the controls ‘cause if we look at him if we act like we’re paying attention to what he’s doing then he

  might

  come

  after

  us

  next.

  The freakish Halo music plays on and

  on and

  on. He heads through the arch to the kitchen his shoes

  stamping on the green

  linoleum he goes right over to

  her

  at the stove cooking his goddamn mashed potatoes stirring

  stirring

  stirring she don’t move she don’t run she just stirs

  stirs

  stirs

  he says

  nothing

  to her to the

  girl he married to the

  mother

  of his kids he comes behind her at the stove

  his shoes squeak he

  grabs

  her

  the spoon plops in the potatoes no not even a plop not a sound it

  sinks soundless

  like

  her.

  He holds her against him blue sleeve on white apron

  squeezing

  squeezing

  squeezing into her ribs like he’s doing the Heimlich

  his tie clip presses in her back

  he sticks his semi-automatic piece of crap weapon in her mouth clanks

  it against her teeth shoves

  it

  down

  her

  throat clicks

  off the safety and she don’t

  make a sound

  she

  just

  stands there and takes it. Not a peep not a flinch not a blink of panic

  nothing she just takes it she

  melts

  for him

  melts like the butter she stirred in his mashed potatoes made from

  scratch

  peeled one by one

  eyes carved out

  she

  melts she just disappears

  she’s

  gone.

  Like every husband in the world kisses his wife like this.

  Like she

  deserves

  it like she did something that’d

  make

  it

  okay

  for the man who

  swore

  to

  love and cherish her

  to do

  this

  in front of

  me.

  Hey, I saw the video.

  There wasn’t nothing in those vows ‘bout guns or fists neither for that matter. Do you Caitlyn Ruby Shields promise to take a pounding anytime Joseph Thomas Riley damn well feels like laying one on? No, I don’t think Father Gallagher mentioned that.

  God I

  hate

  that name I

  hate that I’m

  named

  after

  him. My pop I mean. Not Father Gallagher.

  Mom in her satin white dress with the lacy veil and the puffed

  sleeves the long

  train

  dragging

  behind her the big-ass bouquet of white roses she

  cradled

  in her arms

  poor

  Mom she looked so happy no one told her ‘bout the guns. And

  him

  he’s standing there by Father Gallagher in his black tux black bow-tie

  that

  prick

  he’s always

  so neat

  looking

  so smug

  hair slicked

  back I could’ve killed him even then if

  only

  I was born.

  That’s a

  lie

  I can’t even

  kill

  him

  now.

  I just sit here

  pretending

  to

  play

  Halo while my mom gets a Glock rammed down her throat I can’t even save my mom from this piece of shit who goes out to serve

  and

  protect

  all day

  some

  joke.

  She stopped crying like five years ago.

  She stopped crying when I was twelve.

  Me I never cried much not in front of him he warned me not to.

  He told us me and my brothers not to let one tear drop on the carpet or we’d get it too. He don’t hit us much he just

  says

  he might.

  Me and Jimmy we’re pussies I guess Warren’s nine what could he do but me and Jimmy we sit there

  day

  after

  day fingers touching stupid useless buttons day after

  day night after

  night he hits her hits

  her hits

  her and we watch.

  Week after

  week month

  after month we

  watch.

  She gets slammed

  into walls so hard pictures fall she gets shoved

  so rough his finger marks are in her arm she gets thrown

  to the floor and kicked

  kicked

  kicked

  and we hold our controls and we hold our breaths and watch we

  watch

  we watch.

  Warren cries in bed. I check on him before I go to sleep, stick my head in his door. The blankets are pulled up over him he’s just a

  lump

  underneath. There’s no noise but the covers shake he’s under there holding it

  all

  in

  I know ‘cause I did that too.

  He’s only nine.

  He’ll learn to cut that shit

  soon

  enough.

  Me and Jimmy we don’t cry.

  And she don’t cry neither.

  So

  what’s the

  problem maybe this is

  normal maybe this is

  life maybe everybody on Long Island does this behind the doors they close and lock when they come

  home.

  This’s all I know and

  maybe

  this’s right but it

  don’t feel right I wanna help her

  but

  I

  don’t.

  I watch Mom suck steel and then we all eat. We sit at the

  table slide our chairs in

  we pick up our forks

  like

  nothing.

  Pass the potatoes.

  Part One

  Munchkinland

  “She was awakened by a shock, so sudden and severe that if Dorothy had not been lying on the soft bed she might have been hurt. As it was, the jar made her catch her breath and wonder what had happened; and Toto put his cold little nose into her face and whined dismally. Dorothy sat up and noticed that the house was not moving; nor was it dark, for the bright sunshine came in at the window, flooding the little room. She sprang from her bed and with Toto at her heels ran and opened the door.”

  —From The Wonderful Wizard of Oz by L. Frank Baum

  One

  Dorothy

  He looks like a sculpture by Michelangelo. Like his body was intricately carved, chip by chip until it was perfect.

  He’s beautiful.

  When I saw his muscles—even half covered by his Metallica T-shirt they couldn’t be denied—when I saw his arms, I knew they could keep me safe. Funny, I never thought I needed protection, but there it was, that thought, and just like that everything changed.

  He was sitting with a bunch of guys in Dunkin’ Donuts when Amy and I walked in. Dunkin’ Donuts is apparently the mecca of teen society in Highland Park. Not that t
here’s much to choose from in this one-square-mile town. There’s a pizza place, a Chinese restaurant, a laundry … well, you get the picture. Manhattan, it’s not. Anyway, the cool crowd gathers in Munchkinland.

  Personally, I find the bright fuchsia and orange colors a tad aggressive on the eyes, but what the hey. When in Rome …. And it looks like I’m going to be in Rome for a while.

  So Amy—the one friend I’ve made thus far in my two days here—she headed right past all those guys, just ignored them and headed for the counter. I meant to follow, but those biceps … they held me back.

  Imagine if they were holding me.

  The rest of the guys, they were yammering away, making crude jokes and cracking themselves up. He sat slightly apart, leaning his wrought iron chair back against the oh-so-pink wall.

  My eyes scanned higher, rising over his thick, strong neck to his finely chiseled jaw, lips, cheeks, nose.

  He’s a work of art.

  To his eyes then, to his smoky-grey eyes that stared back at me. He had the look of an animal caught in a trap. It was like he was caged inside that beautiful body, like he was asking me to carve deeper and set his soul free.

  “What are you doing, Dorothy?”

  I guess I didn’t answer fast enough because Amy grabbed at my arm, pulled me closer to the counter. “Those guys, they’re jerks. We don’t talk to them.”

  “I wasn’t actually talking to ….”

  “Listen, they’re losers. Get your donut and come in the back room, that’s where everyone is.”

  I turned and looked at him. He was still watching me, tracking me with those eyes ….

  “Are you insane?” Amy yanked me around again. “That’s Joey Riley. He’s the biggest loser of them all.”

  “He doesn’t look like a loser.”

  “Hel-lo, do you think losers come with big ‘loser’ signs attached? No, they can come in some exceptional packaging. But when you unwrap them and you peel away all that plastic coating stuff and rip off the safety tags, then guess what, it’s too late to return them.”

  “Could you be more specific?” I asked.

  “How about Joey Riley beats people up for fun, sends them to the hospital. How about Joey Riley drinks and smokes weed. How about Joey Riley’s been arrested, sent to jai—Oh, crap, he’s coming over …. Hey, Joey! What’s up?” Amy’s lips widened into a faux smile. I was beginning to not like my only friend. Maybe it was time to make another.

  I turned around, faced him.

  Faced those muscles, faced those eyes. If Amy was correct about him fighting he must’ve been awfully good, because he didn’t have a visible mark. I tried to think of him as bad; I tried to shut him down in my head, but who was I kidding? He didn’t answer Amy, he didn’t even glance at her. He was all about me, and it was reciprocal.

  “Hi, Doll,” he said in a voice low and husky.

  “Doll?” I echoed. “Are we in some sort of 1940s gangster movie?”

  “What? No, I … I didn’t mean anything by ….” His face tensed, reddened.

  “It’s okay,” I jumped in. “Doll should be the worst name I’m ever called.”

  His jaw loosened, and he smiled just a little, around the edges. “Haven’t seen you around before,” he said.

  “I just moved here, from New York.”

  He nodded, his long brown hair brushing ever so slightly against his shoulders. Lucky hair. “That’s cool. I’m Joey.”

  He hesitated, then offered me his hand. It was calloused, kind of bent and bumpy-looking. His knuckles were uneven, bruised. I guessed he did punch people.

  I hesitated, then took it.

  A warm energy moved through me when we touched. It was all I could do not to melt into his arms, and I’m not the melting type.

  I swallowed deeply. “I’m Dorothy.”

  Joey

  She looks like a

  doll

  like one of them

  porcelain

  dolls something so

  fragile and

  precious

  you should put

  high

  on

  a

  shelf to keep

  safe and never

  never

  touch.

  Mom had a bunch of them three shelves full ‘til Pop had

  enough

  he said he couldn’t stand them all

  staring

  while he was sleeping.

  And he didn’t want

  me

  and

  Jimmy near no girly shit neither he said

  no sons

  of his

  were gonna

  wind

  up

  fags. So Mom had to

  pack

  them up she

  wrapped

  them in that

  bubble stuff she

  taped

  the boxes

  real

  good

  so no dust would get in and she

  left

  them in Grandma’s

  basement.

  I still remember them I remember their

  faces all

  smooth and delicate their

  eyes so

  wide so innocent like

  nothing bad’s

  ever

  happened

  to them. Pure that’s it they were

  so

  pure.

  She’s like that.

  Hey

  Doll,

  I said that’s what I

  called her

  without even thinking.

  I almost didn’t go over there she was with frigging Amy Farber her crowd

  don’t

  see

  me

  even when they see me. But she had those big blue eyes like my mom’s dolls so I went.

  She said something ‘bout

  the

  movies

  I didn’t know

  what

  she was talking about. I thought

  she was pissed but

  then

  she smiled

  and

  it

  was

  okay.

  Her hair’s like those dolls’ too.

  Long and glossy.

  And wavy.

  It’s wavy

  like you could just

  unfurl

  your fingers in it and set course.

  You could just drift far

  far away.

  There was all this noise in there. There was people

  yakking on line ordering

  donuts and shit

  there was registers ringing there was tip

  cups clinking

  there was background music some kind of top forty whining b.s. but when we started talking there was

  only

  our voices.

  She’s new

  here

  she’s from New

  York, she said. You could tell she had class she was wearing a top that actually fit her it

  covered her not like these girls who let their stomachs hang out all over the place like that’s

  supposed to be attractive.

  I must be

  crazy even

  talking to her, I thought. She’s probably used to all these

  rich

  fancy

  dudes but the way she kept

  looking

  at me

  I thought, Well maybe ….

  There was all these eyes

  watching.

  There was Jimmy and the guys at the table

  there was

  frigging

  Amy

  there was the people buying

  donuts and shit there was the people

  ringing

  shit

  up.

  But when we looked at each other there was

  only us.

  So I introduced myself I didn’t wanna

  stick

  o
ut

  my hand

  partly ‘cause it’s a

  disaster all twisted

  up from fights and I thought

  for

  sure

  it would spook her but also ‘cause she looked like a

  doll

  like one of Mom’s

  dolls

  and you

  shouldn’t

  ever

  touch

  them

  they might break.

  But I did it.

  I

  forced

  myself

  ‘cause that’s what you’re supposed to do

  especially

  when someone’s from a place all classy and

  polished

  like New

  York that’s what they do there and anyway

  I

  can’t

  lie

  I really did wanna do it, I wanted to

  touch

  her.

  And she took it.

  She

  took

  it.

  I thought she

  wasn’t

  gonna but she slipped her

  soft

  soft

  fingers round my

  rough

  scabby

  hand.

  She

  touched me she

  touched me she touched

  me

  and something warm

  crackled

  through my body.

  It didn’t start in me it didn’t start in her it started right between our hands like two sticks rubbing

  like some kind of

  friction

  we caused together.

  For sure I thought she’d

  drop

  my hand like a

  hot

  potato

  and run right outta Dunkin’ Donuts but

  she didn’t.

  She said

  her name was

  Dorothy

  and I thought,

  Where’s

  Toto? But thank god I kept my trap shut that time ‘cause how many chances

  do

  you

  get

  really before you’re chalked up for the

  jerk

  you

  are?

  We were still holding hands looking at each other I was just glad I wasn’t

  drooling

  or something I’m such a

  doofus and then

  fucking

  Amy

  cleared her throat

  A-hem

  and Dorothy

  let

  go.

  You coming or what, Amy asked her and she said

  yes

  she

  was.

  She said

  nice

  to meet

  me and all that crap.

  I figured,

  That’s

  that.

  She went to the counter and ordered a croissant and a mocha latte for crying

  out

  loud. What made me think

  someone

  like

  that

  would like

  someone

  like

  me?

  Someone who’d pick a

  croissant

 

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