A Question of Manhood

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A Question of Manhood Page 26

by Robin Reardon


  And while you’re at it, take THAT for making Chris die. For making him do what you couldn’t, to be the man you couldn’t be. For forcing him to go someplace he hated, and then to get killed there before he had a chance to get back to being normal.

  TAKE THAT!

  That last one? That’s what I wanted to shout every time I came. Every time I shot cum. It was like I was shooting Dad with the gun he was never given.

  Chapter 13

  People kept bringing their dogs into the store to see JJ. The appointment thing worked pretty well, once customers caught on to it. But did Dad ever thank me? You know the answer to that. Instead he just kept piling praise onto JJ. It was, “Oh, JJ, you were so good with Mrs. So-and-so.” And, “JJ, how did you learn how to do that?” And, “JJ, how did you manage to get that animal under control?” And, “JJ, I can’t tell you how delighted I am to have you with us this summer.” It made me grind my teeth.

  JJ brought Cain in a few times on Wednesdays. I gotta say, that was one ugly dog. Little piggy eyes you couldn’t see very well, ears clipped into tight curls that pointed toward each other over the top of his head. Didn’t look like he had a wasted ounce of body space; there was no fat on him anywhere. Most of his short fur was charcoal, but there was a thin line of white down the center of his face and a blaze of it on his chest. I didn’t know a lot about pit bulls except that they could be mean, and this one looked like he could live up to it if he wanted to. He wasn’t a big dog, though. Not as big as Dante.

  On the first few visits with Cain, JJ came in through the store only as far as the closed stockroom door, if Dante was inside, and I could hear Dante growling in there while Cain just hung out. Or JJ would take Cain into the stockroom, if Dante was outside. He said he was gradually introducing Dante to Cain’s scent. It was funny to watch Dante in the stockroom, if he’d been outside and Cain had violated his sanctuary. He’d nose all around and growl a little. Once he lifted his leg, but I caught him before he could do much.

  By sometime in July Dante stopped reacting very much at all, and JJ said it was time for them to meet. He and Dad, who was very interested to see this event, waited with Cain in the store, just inside the open door to the stockroom, and JJ asked me to bring Dante in from his run.

  “Put the choke collar on first. Be sure you have a good grip on the leash, and be ready to yank him around so his back is to us if need be. I’ll stand here where we can shut the door between the dogs if that becomes necessary.”

  Doing my best not to seem nervous, I grabbed Dante’s choke collar and leash and went out, remembering to call him to me instead of going to him. Keeping the leash short and my grip tight, I made Dante follow me into the stockroom, but as soon as he was inside and saw Cain, he forgot who was boss. He lunged.

  I did my best to yank him around; jerking on the collar wasn’t going to do anything. So I kept him from getting to the doorway where Cain was, but I just couldn’t get him to turn his back. Suddenly JJ was beside me. He grabbed the leash and literally lifted Dante’s front end off the floor and turned him around. Dante wheeled again, and again JJ turned him. But when Dante wheeled yet again, JJ said to me, “Get him down. Push the collar down onto the floor.”

  I tried. Really, I tried. I knew what JJ had done, and I would have sworn I could do it, but I was just a little too scared to concentrate. Or maybe all those warnings I’d heard JJ give Dad earlier this summer, about how most people shouldn’t try this, made me hesitate.

  JJ did it. He waited until he was sure I couldn’t, and then he did it.

  “Help me hold him!” he shouted over Dante’s noise. I managed to do that, though I was careful to watch where those jaws were snapping. I have to say, though, it didn’t actually seem like he was trying to bite us.

  Finally Dante stopped struggling, and both he and I were panting. I looked toward the door and there was Cain, Dad holding his leash, interested but calm as he sat watching the show.

  “Sorry,” I said to JJ. “I just couldn’t—”

  “It’s tough the first time you have to do it. It’s like you can’t really believe you can. But you can. Not everyone has it in them, but you do. And next time, you’ll be able to.”

  JJ stood, took Dante’s leash, and gave it a slight tug. Dante stood, and JJ turned him so his back was to Cain and made him sit. At first Dante had a kind of beaten look on his face, but we all stayed where we were for a minute, and he seemed to feel better about himself, almost like he’d forgotten his humiliation. But he hadn’t forgotten about Cain. He kept starting to snarl and trying to turn toward the pit bull, but JJ was still able to back him down and make him stay put, facing away from this threat to his dominion. They didn’t get any closer to each other, but JJ made Dante just sit there, his back to Cain, for a couple of minutes. I couldn’t help thinking Dante would get the better of Cain, if it came to it. He was a bigger dog, and he seemed so much more ferocious.

  Finally JJ turned Dante and made him sit again. “Paul, you see how I turned him? I allowed him to turn. It was my decision, not his.”

  Dante, unbelievably, was not even looking at Cain anymore. Oh, he knew the other dog was there, and Cain knew Dante was, but they both just sat and looked around.

  JJ said, “That’s enough for a first meeting, I think. Maybe next week we’ll let them get closer and actually sniff each other. That will help Dante learn how to be a dog with other dogs. But we don’t want to push him too far today. Mr. Landon, will you lead Cain back into the store? I’ll be right there.” When Dad had left, JJ said, “Your father is very good with dogs.”

  For some reason this irritated me. Maybe because of how jealous I’d been feeling when Dad walked Dante. Maybe because I knew that Dad would hate JJ if he knew the truth about him. “I’ll take Dante back outside,” I said, wanting to exert some control.

  “No, I think he’d be more comfortable in here. He needs to know the room he thinks of as home is safe. It’s important that he wasn’t allowed to chase Cain out, so he wasn’t able to claim the space for his. It belongs to you, not him, and you let him use it. But he needs to feel safe here again.”

  What about me? Where can I go to feel safe? I felt kind of like I’d had the wind knocked out of me. I couldn’t control Dante after all. Puny little gay JJ had had to come to my rescue, and Dad had seen that. My room, like hell. Nothing here is mine. Every day more and more of it belongs to JJ.

  It felt even worse a few minutes later, when I heard Dad talking to JJ, who was about to take Cain home. “JJ, that was phenomenal. What an experience! You do amazing things with these animals.”

  “Thanks, Mr. Landon. But it’s just a matter of thinking like a dog.”

  “Maybe, but so many people can’t even learn to understand other people, let alone manage to do something like this.”

  Yeah. Try understanding me, Daddy-o.

  The Sunday after the first meeting of the dogs, Marty and Kevin showed up around two o’clock. I was working on the goddamned fish tanks again, and they found me. We shot the breeze for a couple of minutes, tales of conquests, sights seen as they cruised in the Mustang, that sort of thing.

  Then, “Where’s the Wunderkind?”

  My eyes flashed toward Marty. So he remembered that, too. And it seemed he deliberately said it the way he wanted to say it, not the way Anthony had.

  “I think he’s restocking bags of dog food.”

  Marty jerked his chin toward Kevin and they headed toward the floor-to-ceiling shelves where we stack dry food for dogs, in two aisles, and cats, in one. The shelves were open on both sides to allow for maximum flexibility for whatever you might want to store on them, and for access from either side. I watched them go into the aisle where JJ was working. Should I follow? What are they likely to do? What will JJ do? Will I get into trouble? I decided I’d better follow slowly in the direction they’d gone, and I could hear Marty’s slurred voice.

  “How’s it going?”

  “Fine,” from JJ. Quiet. Calm. Nonc
ommittal.

  “Those bags look kinda heavy.” No response. “Aren’t they heavy for you?”

  “They’re fine.”

  God, but he reminded me of Anthony, responding to my offers of a ride. You’re not exactly making yourself too much trouble now, Wunderkind.

  So here I am again, caught between Marty and someone I don’t like but who doesn’t really deserve the kind of attention Marty wants to lavish on him, and again I’m leaning in the direction of Marty. Again. Why? Was I still afraid of Marty or something?

  Yeah. I guess I was.

  From where I stood, a little hidden behind a low display case with ferrets in it, I saw Marty and Kevin go down the aisle past JJ’s. Marty had that silent cackle expression on his face that told me he was up to no good, and in a few seconds I noticed the heavy bags on the shelf over JJ’s head start to move. I was debating whether to shout, to warn JJ, when he seemed to hear something. He stood and moved to the side just as a thirty-pound bag came tumbling down. It thudded to the floor and split open, dried nuggets sliding along the aisle, under the shelves, all around.

  I think if Dad had been in the store, Marty and Kevin would have dashed for the door, like the day they set the tarantula on JJ’s back. But they knew he wasn’t around. So instead they sauntered back to the end of JJ’s aisle, Marty in the lead.

  “Oh, my,” Marty said, and clucked his tongue. “What a mess. That’s too bad.”

  I had moved closer, and I could see that JJ wasn’t even looking at Marty. It was as though he chose to believe the bag had fallen of its own accord, and Marty and Kevin didn’t exist. He turned and walked out the other end of the aisle toward the stockroom, and for one crazy moment I thought he might be going to get Dante. But he came back with a broom, a piece of cardboard, and a trash bag, and he just started cleaning up.

  Marty stood there a minute and then said, “Is it easier for you like that, just a few bits at a time? Not so heavy?” JJ still did nothing to acknowledge him. Marty punched Kevin’s shoulder and the two of them headed casually for the front door, laughing loudly. I followed them with my eyes and then, to my horror, I saw Carol step out of the office. I headed back to the fish tanks, ready to deny any knowledge of anything.

  JJ had said he wouldn’t lie again to cover my friends’ pranks, so I expected to hear about this. And sure enough, Carol came to find me.

  “Paul, you’ve got to do something about those two friends of yours.”

  I kept working. I liked Carol, but what the hell did she expect me to do? But I couldn’t just ignore her. I could, however, fake ignorance. “What did they do this time?”

  “They’re pushing those heavy bags of dog food off the shelves and onto the floor. Never mind that they’ve wasted the dog food. They could have hurt JJ seriously!”

  Straightening up, I said, “That’s awful. I’m sorry, Carol. He’s okay though, right?”

  “This time.”

  “Look, I’ll pay for the dog food. Please don’t tell Dad. He doesn’t need anything more to worry about.”

  “True enough; these register tallies coming up short are plenty.” And then she did what I was hoping she’d do. “Oh, never mind. But those boys are trouble, Paul. You should make it clear you don’t want to hang around with them. Maybe they’ll stay away.”

  “You may be right.” I thought this was lame, especially as I had no intention of doing what she said, but it seemed to do the trick. And Dad never said anything about it to me.

  In a kind of delayed reaction, I realized she’d made it sound like even more money was missing. It’s no big deal, in a store like this, for the registers to be a little off at the end of a busy day, but there’d been talk of bigger sums lately. Who would do that? Certainly not Alice, and certainly not JJ. But Dave…

  Tuesday, Mrs. Carter came in, still no dog in tow, and headed straight for JJ, who was restocking bird supplies. She looked upset, so I worked my way over to where I could hear. She was already into her story.

  “I couldn’t stop her.” Mrs. Carter dug a tissue out of a pocket and blew her nose. She was crying, at least a little. “She ran right out into the street and tried to bite the tires.” I heard a sob or two. “She always hated the trash truck.”

  Gross. Gypsy’s fur and guts are now stuck in the treads of trash truck tires?

  I peeked around the end of the aisle and saw that JJ had wrapped his arms around the now-weeping Mrs. Carter, and she was sobbing openly onto his shoulder. I expected he’d give her a couple of pats on the back and pull away, but they stood there like that, swaying a little, long enough for me to realize that JJ was crying, too. His eyes were closed, and there were tears making their way down his face. Finally they separated.

  “I knew you’d understand,” she said. “Of all the people I’ve told, most of them have just said, ‘Oh, I’m sorry to hear that.’ And then it’s on to something else. Either they don’t care very much or they don’t want anything embarrassing to happen.” She snuffled and blew her nose again, and JJ wiped his face.

  He said, “In her whole life, the best times she had were the ones you gave her. She died a much happier dog than she would have if you hadn’t taken her in.”

  Well, that was a stupid thing to say, ’cause now Mrs. Carter was sobbing all over again. Another hug, shorter this time, and he walked her out to her car. They stood out there talking for a few minutes, and when she drove off he didn’t come back inside. He walked around the back.

  Curious, I went into the stockroom and then peeked outside where I knew Dante was on his run. He was lying in the shade, and JJ sat beside him, his face buried in the fur on Dante’s neck.

  Some vet this kid is going to make if he falls apart every time some dog buys it.

  I didn’t expect to see JJ on Wednesday. He didn’t need to walk Dante, but he came in with Cain in tow. I was bagging at one of the registers, and I saw him and the dog go into Dad’s office. They stood there chatting about nothing much, it seemed, and then Dad took Cain’s leash and walked him back and forth in the front part of the store. Cain looked docile enough, like he knew what he was expected to do and didn’t mind doing it. JJ stood there watching until a lady customer came up to him. It was his day off, and that’s what he should have said, but there was a dog in the picture, and he probably couldn’t resist. It was a big dog, some mixed breed, and the owner couldn’t seem to get it to walk, just be dragged around.

  “When he’s off the leash, he moves. But when I try to walk him? Forget it.”

  Before you could have said, “Why should he follow you if you haven’t convinced him he should,” JJ was working with the dog. He went to get a choke chain, and he stopped and talked to Dad; it seemed he wanted to make sure Dad could keep Cain busy while JJ worked with the dog. But once JJ was outside, Carol called to Dad.

  “Andy? That supplier of dog packs is on the phone.”

  Dad walked Cain toward the office. “Carol, can you take him while I talk to the guy?”

  She looked scared. “That’s a pit bull, Andy. I don’t know…”

  I have no idea why I did it. I said, “I’ll take him.” How bad could it be? He’d been—what was the word, recovered—hadn’t he? So I took the leash from Dad almost without him having to slow down in his limping walk with Cain, and Cain and I kept going. Only I didn’t just walk back and forth in the front. I turned and headed toward the stockroom.

  I see now that I must have been out of my mind. But at the time, all I was thinking was that it was my turn to rise to the top of the heap, to get some credit. I was sick of being ignored, dismissed, taken for granted, made to feel like I didn’t matter. So I was going to introduce Cain to Dante. Alone. Watch this, Wunderkind.

  Dante was out on his run, I knew. So I went through the stockroom with Cain and then out into the back. Dante, at the far end of the run, saw Cain and bristled. He got up and growled and then started barking. I thought it would be okay to move closer, but Cain almost seemed like he wanted to stay put, not go
any closer. Afraid of the big dog, you wimp?

  So I was looking at Cain, trying to get him to move forward without dragging him, when I heard the whine of Dante’s run wire. It happened so fast. Cain’s piggy eyes flicked toward Dante and without any other motion that I could see, he was airborne. The leash snapped out of my hand, and the two dogs collided with such force that I heard their heads crash together.

  Fuck!

  They were both on their hind legs, teeth flashing, forearms thrashing around. Desperately I tried to get hold of Cain’s leash, but I was stark-raving terrified of getting close to those behemoths. I danced around for a few seconds, wondering how bad it could get, when I saw blood spurting from someplace.

  “Help! Somebody, help!” I ran back into the stockroom and through the store, my eyes searching frantically for JJ. Was he really still out front? Hadn’t he heard me? Christ! Where was he?

  Carol came toward me. “Paul, what is it?”

  “Where’s JJ?”

  She looked toward the front, but all either of us could see was the customer standing there holding her dog’s leash, facing the side of the building.

  “He’s gone out back!” I turned and dashed back the way I’d come, wondering what on earth I could do to help. And there was JJ, aiming a hose full onto the dogs. He saw me.

  “Paul! Get hold of Dante’s lead, but don’t pull him back until I can get Cain off of him.”

 

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