Read Fake House Online

Authors: Linh Dinh

Tags: #General, #Fiction, #Fantasy, #Vietnamese Americans, #Asia, #Vietnam, #Short Stories (Single Author), #Vietnam - Social Life and Customs, #Short Stories, #History

Fake House (10 page)

At the bus stop there were only me and some pale kid, maybe twenty, with a red goatee. He was sporting a brown fedora and a muscle-T, to showcase at least a thousand dollars’ worth of ink on his spindly arms. All kinds of bullshit: LA VIDA LOCO, a scorpion, a knife through the heart, a crying clown, four aces.… I looked left, then right, before walking up to him: “Yo, buddy, you got a cigarette?”

He gave me a Camel, but at arm’s length.

“You got a light?”

He pulled out a Zippo lighter.

And this is exactly what happened next: As he came close, I grabbed the hair on both sides of his face, spat out my cigarette, and gave him a full kiss on the lips. He tried to scream, but I bit his nose, hard!, and would not let go until he slackened.

Then I let him go.

The sorry-assed faggot knelt on the ground for about a minute, wide-eyed and breathing through his mouth.

“Now,” I blubbered, “can I kick you in the vein?”

B
OO
H
OO
H
OO

A
lthough Paradox lost his right contact lens in New Haven last night, he hasn’t told anyone in the band about it. He is the road manager and owner of the van, a piece of junk he normally uses for his carpentry business—Paradox Home Improvements. Every time he switches lanes from left to right, he cuts somebody off. The last time, a Honda Civic started honking frantically, and Frank, riding shotgun, reached his beefy right arm out the window to flip off the driver, an older black woman. “Roll up the fuck-in’ window!” Karen yelled.

It is cold and drizzly, November weather. Karen is trying hard to fall asleep. Her head is tilted back, her cheek pressed against the windowpane. She has comically sad eyes on a cheerful face. When her eyes are closed, her face is happy. Karen plays a mean guitar. Slouched next to her on the middle seat is Tyler, the lead singer. The drummer, Orlando, lies awake in the back. Frank plays bass.

Paradox is hung over all over again. The blood vessels behind his eyeballs are being plucked by a determined hand. He is familiar with this ordeal, however, and is grimly enjoying it. As he drives, Paradox squints, bares his crooked teeth, and spits out phrases addressed to no one: “I’m sorry!” or “Unreal!” or “You’re a fool!” He has driven the band so many times that they are well used to this behavior.

The sweet smell of bourbon seeping from the pores of Paradox’s pasty skin is blending with all the other smells inside the van: a hard slice of cheese pizza lying facedown under the front seat; Frank’s new leather jacket; Karen’s perfume, sloshed into her armpits in place of the roll-on deodorant she forgot to bring.… They have been on the road for seven days, beginning in Philadelphia and stopping in Allentown, Scranton, Newark, Hartford, and New Haven.

Between them they know enough people to always have a place to crash after each gig. Last night they slept in Tyler’s sister’s living room. A single mother with a three-month-old baby, her apartment smelled like a cat’s litter box. Right after coffee they took off. Now they are headed to Northampton, their last gig, then home. Almost broke, they skipped lunch this afternoon to save money.

The tour is not going too well. In Allentown they were paired with a speed metal band, Valhalla, and played in front of ten people. They have sold no T-shirts and only a few CDs. The highlights, so far, were Newark, where both Frank and Tyler got laid, and Hartford, where they were interviewed on a college radio station.

By the time they get to Northampton, everyone is exhausted. Tyler says, “Let’s hope they’ll give us some grub at this place.” (In New Haven they were fed buffalo wings and given two
pitchers of Iron City, while the headliners, Crucifux, were given entrees and salads. “We’ll get that next year,” Tyler said.)

“What’s the name of the club?” Karen asks.

“Auto Da Fe,” Paradox answers.

“Who we playing with?”

“Doctor At Tree.”

Except for Paradox, forty and balding, the rest are in their late thirties. Veterans of many other bands, all unknown, they are already too old for this business. A breakthrough appears imminent, however: Their newly released CD has been reviewed in the
Village Voice
and
Spin
.

Even without tangible returns they would probably keep on playing anyway. At least until they’re sixty. If you’re a musician, that’s what you do. What else is there?

If you sit back and think about it, of course it sucks to be in a band no one gives a shit about (and the majority of the people who do come to your shows are idiots anyway), but if you’re a musician, that’s what you do, even if you’re too old for this business and they only pay you a hundred dollars a night, which, minus gas and divided by five, amounts to nothing.

But, all in all, they would rather be famous. Tyler always says, “When you’re famous, people will cooperate with you. Fame is like a sexual musk. It entices the slaves to come out of the woodwork.” He likes to quote Gertrude Stein: “What an artist needs most is praise.”

Once he philosophized while tripping: “People think of fame as
temporal immortality
when in fact what it is is
spatial immortality
. You don’t get to live forever but you do get to live everywhere at the same time.”

Preening himself for eventual fame, Tyler has become hyperconscious
of his appearance. He is nearly handsome, rugged, but with long, blond curls, which he likes to shake from side to side on stage. Once he tried shaving his head, thinking it would turn him into a skinhead or a convict. But a look in the mirror showed a buddha, if not a Chinese cook. He quickly grew his hair back. To get rid of his love handles, he has started to do sit-ups in the morning. There is a large tattoo of a ringing telephone on his right biceps, which he showcases by wearing a tank top whenever possible.

Paradox drives the van into the Auto Da Fe’s nearly empty parking lot. “I’m sorry!” he shouts. The first thing they see inside is a mural of an orgy on the back wall. Swirling naked bodies in black, white, and yellow, with a slogan painted over it in red, white, and blue:
MAKE LOVE NOT WAR BECAUSE WAR IS UGLY AND LOVE IS LOVELY
.

The club has two large rooms: one with a long bar and one with a tiny stage. With the bad weather tonight they will be lucky to have fifty in the audience. The after-work crowd, who will be drunk and home by the time the music starts, sit at the bar and watch them lug in their gear. Some redheaded guy in a suit shouts “Hi!” to Karen. Two or three people laugh. The manager of Auto Da Fe, a very short guy with dyed-black hair, with a mouth set at an odd angle, in shades and a leather vest, comes out to greet them: “Doctor At Tree?”

“Sluice Gate,” Tyler says.

Paradox approaches the little guy. He props his right hand in front of his own nose, slicing his face in half vertically. In a voice suddenly severe, he says, “I’m Paradox, the road manager.”

“Nice to meet you, Pierre Docks. I’m Pablo.”

“That’s Tyler, Karen, Frank, and Orlando.”

“Welcome. Welcome. Make yourself comfortable. The sound guy will be with you in a moment. We should have a nice crowd tonight. Drink as much as you want. Draft beer’s on the house.”

“How about food?” Paradox asks.

“We don’t serve food here.”

“How about bags of potato chips?” Paradox persists.

The manager turns to the bartender and says, “Give these guys some chips.”

As they are doing their sound check, some drunk wanders over from the bar, huffing, and says to Frank, “What’s the name of this band?” The drunk appears to be about fifty. He has an enormous red face, with a mouth that always hangs open.

It always annoys Frank when someone has to ask for the name of the band. If they were already in the club, then they should know. “Sluice Gate,” he answers.

“That’s about the dumbest name for a band I’ve ever heard,” the drunk opines, then walks away.

“Who asked for your fuckin’ opinion!” Frank yells after him.

After sound check, Orlando, Tyler, and Karen go back to the van to smoke a joint. Paradox and Frank stay behind at the bar. There is Sam Adams on tap and each has a mug in front of him.

“You know, I’m sort of from this area.” Frank grins.

Paradox squints for a long time, then shouts, “Smooth bore!”

Inside the van Karen, mellowed by pot, lies on her side on the backseat with her eyes closed. Although not altogether beautiful, she has a face that will never be scored by experiences, that will never grow old. It will stay young, one suspects, even inside a coffin. “Look,” Tyler says, “they misspelled the name of our band on this flyer.”

“Let’s see,” Orlando reaches for the flyer. “Sluice Gait,” it says.

“I kind of like this version,” Orlando concludes. “It says here that the Nguyens are playing here tomorrow.”

“Put some music on,” Karen says.

Tyler shoves a cassette into the tape deck.

“Who’s this?” Karen asks.

“Blind Lemon Jefferson.”

“Sounds good. I’ve never heard of him!”

Tyler takes a long drag, then says: “You know, this guy died walking into a snowstorm after a recording session.”

“Was he on drugs?”

“No. Blind!”

“I get it: Blind Melon!”

“That’s where they got their name.”

“You know everything!”

The van has become a bubble of mellowness. After a moment Karen says, with her eyes still closed, “You know why semen tastes kinda sweet?”

“I wouldn’t know,” Tyler says. “Why does semen taste kinda sweet, Orlando?”

Orlando is gay and was once the drummer for Pansy Division.

“Because of beer,” Karen answers.

The door to the bar opens and the drunk comes out. He walks over to a pay phone but does not make a call. He stands at the pay phone for a while, in the shadow, with his back to the street. When he has finished and is returning to the bar, he sees the van. He recognizes Tyler, smiles, and mouths the words “fuck you.” Then he goes back inside.

“What was that all about?” Orlando says.

“Why? What happened?” Karen asks.

“Some guy just said ‘fuck you’ to Tyler.”

“This is a lovely town,” Tyler says. They all laugh.

Girls from Smith and Amherst are showing their IDs to the bouncer at the door. The jukebox is blaring Nirvana. Frank downs two double shots of Southern Comfort in quick succession. A fat girl walks up to him. “Excuse me,” she lisps, “are you the guitarist for Doctor At Tree?”

“Yes, I am.”

“I love your CD.”

“Thanks.”

“Would you sign this flyer for me?”

“Sure.”

She gives Frank a pen. “What’s your name?”

“Susan.”

Frank turns to Paradox and whispers: “What’s the name of the guitarist for Doctor At Tree?”

“How the fuck do I know?!”

To Susan. Love, How the Fuck Do I Know
, he scrawls in a loopy script.

After the fat girl goes away, Paradox comments, “Nice-looking girl.”

“You fuck her,” Frank says.

Five minutes before they are to go on, Frank’s mother shows up. She has groceries for the band. White bread, salami, cheese, and apples. “Thanks, Mrs. Johnston,” Tyler smiles. Frank pulls her aside: “What do you think you’re doing, Mom?”

“I just came by to say hello.”

“But I’m a rock musician, Mother!”

“Do you need money?”

Frank doesn’t answer. Mrs. Johnston stuffs eighty dollars into her son’s shirt pocket, then leaves.

They begin with “Sucker Punch,” “Sweet and Sour Sue,” and “Sweeny Erect.” Tyler writes most of their lyrics.
Spin
has called him a poet. For “Sweeny Erect,” he jumbles fragments from Eliot into an incoherent whole. On another song, “Hyacinth Girl,” he takes a section of “The Waste Land” and sings the lines in reverse order:

“Looking into the heart of light, the silence
.
Living nor death, and I knew nothing
,
Speak, and my eyes failed, I was neither
Your arms full, and your hair wet, I could not …”

They play inspired. The crowd, mostly there for Doctor At Tree, drift in and out of the room.

Paradox is still sitting at the bar, downing shots of Turkey. There is a girl sitting next to him. To make conversation, she says, “Do you like Sylvia Plath?” She has long eyelashes and wears purple lipstick. Her breath smells like Stoli. “Unreal!” Paradox shouts. Then “You’re a fool!” Then “I’m sorry!”

Just before midnight the band finishes with a ska version of the Strapping Fieldhands’ “Boo Hoo Hoo”:
Boo hoo hoo! I’m in love with you! Boo hoo hoo! Boo hoo hoo!
Tyler is wailing, his head swiveling
like a gift-shop doll’s. He turns and sees Karen smiling at him. They were lovers once. Many have tried, including Frank. “Boo hoo hoo! Boo hoo hoo!” The thin crowd applauds. They pack up quickly, then leave.

Tyler, Karen, and Orlando are sleeping quietly. Although the trees are very beautiful this time of year, you can’t see them in the dark. They are heading south on Interstate 91.

“How many more hours to Boston?” Frank asks.

“Less than two,” Paradox answers.

“Is that all?”

Other books

Accidents of Providence by Stacia M. Brown
El profesor by Frank McCourt
ARC: The Buried Life by Carrie Patel
Spark: A Sky Chasers Novel by Ryan, Amy Kathleen
The Iraq War by John Keegan
Stryker's Revenge by Ralph Compton
For the Win by Rochelle Allison, Angel Lawson


readsbookonline.com Copyright 2016 - 2024