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Fat Angie

Page 6

by e. E. Charlton-Trujillo


  “OK, prescription drugs aside. What do you think?” KC asked.

  The moment was clear. There. Vulnerability. Trust. Fat Angie had discussed the topic with her therapist to some length.

  “I don’t think people wanna see me,” Fat Angie had said. “I don’t think they understand me.”

  The therapist had made a note: Potential borderline personality disorder with inability to take risks.

  “I don’t know what I think,” said Fat Angie. “I guess I think that I’m —”

  Wang slammed into Fat Angie and knocked her off balance.

  “Oops,” said Wang.

  He sized up the sultry KC.

  “Yo, hey.” Wang bit into an apple.

  “Hey,” said KC.

  “This is Wang,” said Angie. “My adopted brother.”

  “So . . .” Wang said, grinning ear to big ear. “You’re the new girl.”

  “It’s obvious, huh?” KC asked. “Well, I guess blending in wasn’t really an option.”

  A horn honked. A woman waved at KC from a Toyota 4x4.

  “Esther’s here. I gotta split. Nice to meet you, Angie’s brother,” KC said, tugging Fat Angie away from Wang. “You wanna hang tomorrow? Esther’s gonna be at the tattoo studio most of the day. We’d have the casa all to ourselves. I’ve got a stellar collection of indie rock on vinyl. It is absolute ultra.”

  “Yeah?” said Fat Angie.

  “Coolness?” said KC. “What time —”

  “No . . . um . . .” said Fat Angie. “I can’t. I mean, I want to . . . but I have to go to this baby . . . shower thing party with my mom. It’s a required family appearance.”

  “Sweet, I’m in,” said KC.

  “You wanna come to a baby shower party thing with me?”

  “Oh, yeah. They always have the weirdest food. And the games. Have you ever played those jacked-out games?” said KC.

  Fat Angie shook her head.

  “Well, Esther’s got four very fertile sisters. So baby showers are like Super Bowl parties. Absurd-weird fun.”

  “OK,” Fat Angie said.

  “Sweet, we’re there,” said KC. “Call me.”

  The buses lined up as KC slid into the truck. She flashed her right hand with pinky and thumb extended in “call me” mode.

  “Hey,” said Wang.

  “I gotta get on the bus,” Fat Angie said. “Since you never give me a ride.”

  “Anyway. What’s the KC story?” said Wang.

  “Like I would tell you?”

  He shook his head. “Tell me or I’ll stuff your toothpaste with Monistat again.”

  “She’s new,” said Fat Angie flatly.

  “Duh. But what’s her deal? Why is she so interested in you?”

  “Because I’m a nice person,” Fat Angie said. “You used to remember that before you went jerkface to me at school.”

  “Whatev . . .” He laughed. “Just remember, yo. No amount of new-girl cool is gonna make anyone forget your pep rally slash and thrash.”

  “F you,” she said.

  “Oooo. Another failed attempt at foul language. You’re such a fucking saint,” Wang said. “Fucking crazy saint just like —”

  And before Wang could say their sister’s name, Fat Angie shoved him. Hard! So hard that he fell flat on his butt.

  Fat Angie was aware of the unwanted audience.

  She started counting in her head.

  The bus driver called out to her.

  Wang stood, straightening out the handprints she had left on his shirt. “You’re switch is flipped, and I’m telling Mom.”

  “Wang, c’mon. I’m sorry — I didn’t meant to . . .”

  “Get off me,” he said.

  The bus driver closed the doors. Fat Angie froze in place as Wang walked to his Jeep Cherokee.

  “She’ll never come back,” he said. “Never!”

  His voice was swallowed between chatter and bus-engine hum. Fat Angie beat on the bus doors with her palm four times, and it opened. Still counting in her head, she plopped into her usual seat. The Duo of Geekdom continued their spitball target practice. She leaned her head against the seat. Maybe Wang was right. Maybe she did not know how to “belong” in the absence of her sister. That was exactly what she had thought the day she’d slit her wrist with a discount double-edged razor. The main chorus of “Free Fallin’ ”— the Tom Petty song her mother had played on repeat for days after the disappearance was first announced — had echoed in Fat Angie’s head as they lifted her into the ambulance.

  She had told her therapist, “I just couldn’t get the song outta my head. It was exactly how I felt.”

  The therapist had made a note: Music therapy not an option.

  The bus was several stops in when Fat Angie realized she had never read KC’s note.

  Each unfold of the note revealed a graffiti-esque layer of hearts on one side. On the other, written in red ink, was

  Fat Angie entertained the possibility that perhaps she could be the daredevil, the girl against the grain she had hoped to be. Because she was most definitely seen by one new-cool-swell girl, KC Romance!

  Fat Angie stood over the full sheet cake. She had been standing there for three minutes according to the precision timing of her Casio calculator watch. The watch had been her father’s when he was her age. Standing well within earshot, the Triple Threat spoke in cupped hand whispers. Fat Angie could feel their perfectly blue eyes boring a hole into the back of her skull. Their barrage of bubble-gum commentary shaped into a white noise balloon, encasing Fat Angie and the image of that cake. Then, pop! The piercing laughter of her mother burst the otherwise hypnotic moment.

  “Oh, Debbie, that’s the best story,” said her mother in the voice she used only for social gatherings and Wang’s therapist. The voice made Fat Angie’s skin want to rip from the bone. She didn’t quite know why.

  Her mother picked up a dessert plate and a pink plastic knife and fork.

  “What are you doing?” said Fat Angie’s couldn’t-be-bothered mother. “People have been staring at you standing here. You promised to reel it in.”

  “I can’t eat that,” Fat Angie said, her eyes still fixated on the cake.

  “I said it was fine,” said Fat Angie’s mother. “You just have to skip dinner. Trust me, you will survive without one meal.”

  “It’s a fetus,” Fat Angie said, looking at her mother.

  The cake had an ultrasound picture on it. Fat Angie stared at its oddly shaped parts once again.

  “It’s an ultrasound of a baby,” said her mother, annoyed. “And your aunt is very proud of it, so quit being so strange. People will never love you if you keep being so strange. Isn’t that what your therapist told you?”

  “Not in so many words,” Fat Angie said.

  “I see your eccentric new friend is enjoying herself,” said Fat Angie’s mother.

  KC double dipped celery from the veggie platter while playing a baby-name game.

  “Where did you say she was from?” asked her mother, sampling a cookie.

  “I didn’t,” said Fat Angie, her eyes fixed on the motionless baby legs. “That really doesn’t bother you? Baby legs waiting to be devoured?”

  “It’s a cake,” said her mother. “I know you loathe my side of the family. But sometimes you have to do things you don’t want to do.”

  “Why are you talking to me like I’m five?”

  “To be honest, I don’t know how else to talk to you,” said her mother. “You wanted to know.”

  KC plowed in, hanging over Fat Angie’s shoulder. She smelled of Cherry Coke and vanilla-scented candles. “Game’s over. They’re doing karaoke in fifteen. I already put us in to sing . . .” KC tilted her head at the cake. “Is that a . . . ?”

  “A fetus?” Fat Angie finished.

  “It’s not a fetus,” her mother said in a mother-hush voice.

  “WOW!” KC reached for her cell phone. “A fetus — on a cake!” She framed the picture with precision.

>   Fat Angie’s couldn’t-be-bothered mother reeked of incredibly bothered. She stared at KC and sized her up, just as she had when they’d picked her up. KC’s fitted long-sleeved T-shirt with a feminist fist of empowerment on the front and WOMAN POWER stamped in red on the back had forced the room of pastels and pearls into fake hellos and queries of “Where did you get that lovely shirt?” (The one exception was a distant relative who harvested cage-free eggs. She absolutely loved the shirt.)

  “Look,” KC said, holding her cell screen to Angie. “Tell me that is not going to go viral.”

  Fat Angie’s mother leaned into Fat Angie and whispered, “What is she doing?”

  “Being normal,” said Fat Angie.

  Her mother cleared her throat and switched back to party voice. “KC, why did you say you moved here?”

  “I didn’t,” said KC. “Say why. Guess there’s no real super reason. Esther knew a guy in L.A. whose son bought in to a shop out here and they were looking for artists.”

  “Esther?” asked Fat Angie’s mother.

  Fat Angie began to sweat.

  “My mom,” said KC. “She works at Raise the Ink Tattoos on Hamilton. Across from Four Feathers Chicken and Daddy Low Records. She’s wicked great.” KC leaned in to Fat Angie’s mother and pointed to her neck. “I had to beg her to do this though.”

  “That’s a real tattoo?” said Fat Angie’s mother, her voice losing its magic fakeness.

  “M-hmm,” said KC. “It was a massive pain. Literally. But it was like it was always there. The needle just sort of revealed it.”

  “That’s so cool,” said Fat Angie, a super massive grin in full spinout.

  Connie, Fat Angie’s mother, shifted her weight from her right foot to her left. Fat Angie noticed this gesture because it was the stance Connie took when preparing to berate or belittle something or someone.

  “Well, not everyone has to come from a traditional family,” said Connie.

  Fat Angie witnessed the gears readying in her couldn’t-be-bothered mother’s eyes. Connie’s lips parted when —

  “Actually, we’re pretty snore-traditional,” said KC. “Jiffy Pop popcorn and Turner Classic Movies on Friday nights and family dinner every night. Esther thinks family dinner is important to my emotional growth or something Dr. Phil like.”

  “She’s not really home for dinner much,” blurted out Fat Angie about her mother. She had no conscious awareness of how absolutely out of order she had been until her mother hooked on to her arm and reeled her in for an ear chat.

  “I told you not to talk about our personal lives,” said Fat Angie’s mother.

  “What’s personal about you never being home?” said Fat Angie.

  “Connie,” said a party guest, leaning in to Fat Angie’s mother. “Everything OK?”

  “Absolutely. Mother-daughter whispers,” said Fat Angie’s mother.

  “Emily and I are the same way,” said the woman, clearly a little tipsy on the shower sangria. “When I can get the iBud thingies out of her ears.”

  “Everyone over here,” announced Fat Angie’s bursting-pregnant aunt, Meghan.

  Connie nudged Angie toward the table.

  “Angie, what do you think about the cake?” asked Aunt Meghan.

  Fat Angie’s mother’s eyes cut to her. Her pretend smile clearly conveyed that Fat Angie was not to say what she thought. The Triple Threat descended on the table, along with other guests.

  “It’s a fetus?” Fat Angie said.

  “I know!” said her aunt. “It’s absolutely amazing, isn’t it?”

  “Connie.” Meghan held out the cake cutter. “As godmother of this new baby boy, will you cut the cake?”

  Connie’s face stretched to new lengths of fake smile. So much so that her right cheek shook ever so slightly.

  And so Fat Angie’s mother cut into the cake, dismembering the feet. Fat Angie flinched. Arms and legs . . . torso and toes. Fat Angie and KC backed away from the food table as women lined up, barbaric, cutting piece after piece, smiling and laughing, their mouths chewing on fetus image.

  “Give me your plate,” said Angie’s mother.

  Fat Angie reluctantly held her plate up. Part of a leg and foot stared back at her.

  “Come sign up for karaoke,” Meghan said to Connie. “We’ll do a duet.”

  “Be right there,” said Fat Angie’s mother. Then, to Fat Angie, she said, “Eat the cake. Pretend to be interested in what someone else needs.”

  Fat Angie stood there as her mother reentered the posh-posh gathering of matching plates and cups. Why could Angie not simply play along? Be as her mother suggested — normal.

  “Your mom’s kinda different,” said KC.

  “I’m sorry,” said Fat Angie.

  “For?”

  “I should’ve . . .” Fat Angie shook her head. “My family’s a little complicated.”

  “That’s not your fault,” said KC. “Come to one of my so-called family reunions. A competition of Coach purses, fake-and-bake tans, and motorcycle hippies.”

  KC eyed Fat Angie’s serving of cake. “Can I yum?”

  Fat Angie passed the plate to KC, who picked up a fork and ate what Fat Angie imagined was a toe.

  “It’s fine,” KC said, smiling with a smudge of gray icing on her upper lip. “Just eat it with your eyes closed. I do it with squid.”

  Fat Angie closed her eyes and ate very quickly — so quickly that her acid reflux refluxed. She sprinted out of the room.

  Four and a half minutes later, clocked by her Casio calculator watch, Fat Angie was still on the bathroom floor. She had hurled only for the first minute and twelve seconds after jamming her finger down her throat like Marcy Winters on the cheerleading squad. She spent the rest of the time hunched on her knees, staring at the cake remnants floating in the toilet bowl. They did not resemble a person’s image anymore. She could not understand why.

  The 1970s hit “Ring My Bell” boomed from the living room. The drunken women sang off-key. Fat Angie began counting out loud as her therapist would have suggested. She began to digress.

  The ambulance ride to the hospital . . . sirens wailing . . .

  Fat Angie squinted. She drew her knees to her chest and counted aloud from one. The song seeped through. . . .

  Her sister dribbling the basketball . . . crowds cheering . . . bombs . . . war . . .

  “Lester hates his name. He won’t respond to it.”

  She began counting from one again.

  Children screaming on the CBS Evening News. There was blood — everywhere.

  She counted louder, squinted harder. Her sister —

  Fat Angie stopped.

  She could not remember her sister’s voice.

  Pause.

  Stop pause.

  “One two three four five six seven . . .”

  She counted so loud and ran the numbers together so quickly that she did not recognize the knocking on the door until —

  “It’s KC. You cool?”

  “Um . . . just a second,” said Fat Angie.

  Fat Angie lowered the seat and opened the door.

  “Hey,” said KC. “Can I . . .” She motioned to come in.

  Fat Angie perched on the toilet as KC leaned against the wall. Neither one of them really looked at each other for six and a half seconds.

  “I hate parties like this,” Fat Angie said. “These family things my mom drags me and Wang to. Well, when he’s not incarcerated or off his Ritalin. She keeps trying to dress me in something with flowers and lace. Tells me how to walk and talk. And she does this laugh. Where it’s, like, coming through her nose.”

  KC grinned. “Yeah, I kinda noticed.”

  “It’s just really pathetic, you know?” said Fat Angie.

  “Just because your family sucks doesn’t mean you have to,” said KC. “Not that I’m all Buddha-wise on some mountaintop. I just think everyone should carry their own baggage. Like at the bus station.”

  “Yeah,” said Fat Angie.
/>   “Look, let’s bail. Go over to my place.”

  Fat Angie sighed, washing her mouth out at the sink. “My mom will spit branding tools if I leave.”

  “She’ll get over it,” said KC. “Not to mention she’s on the distract. Some half-a-hunk showed up and they stepped out to his car.”

  “Sporty red with pleather seats?” asked Fat Angie.

  “Yeah.”

  “I guess she’s getting less worried about the PDA.”

  “Huh?” said KC.

  “She’s dating Wang’s court-appointed therapist,” said Fat Angie. She wiped her face with the underside of her frilly shirt.

  “That’s so weird,” KC said, chuckling.

  Fat Angie lowered her chin. It doubled.

  “Look, if I sing you a song, can we bail?” asked KC.

  “Seriously, I can’t,” said Fat Angie.

  KC jumped up on the toilet, one foot on the tank. Her head was less than an inch from bumping the ceiling.

  “KC,” said Fat Angie.

  KC sang.

  “It’s true there’s nothing left to do

  But let it all come right out”

  “KC, please,” Fat Angie said.

  KC continued.

  “The truth runs loose

  And you really can’t hide it now”

  “C’mon, you know this one.” KC grinned.

  That beat thing occurred. Then, out of somewhere, Fat Angie’s breath formed into a harmony.

  Fat Angie softly sang with KC.

  “No one else gets me

  The way that you do somehow”

  The girls grinned. KC continued, her voice full, alive . . .

  “But everywhere you go someone’s crying

  And every turn you take you’re scared of trying”

  KC moved to the edge of the tub. She swung back and forth, gaining balance as she sang.

  “But what if maybe

  We could make it out crazy

  We could make it out crazy

  Past all these walls

  We don’t need at all”

  KC smiled, for the first time seeming self-conscious. Fat Angie sobered up from her singing delirium.

 

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