Chapter 8
“What happened to our house, Chuck?” Stan said.
“You saw it,” Chuck said. They were driving away from the scene now, after two hours of watching and talking to both LAFD and LAPD. Chuck gave them as much as he could, then said he was through for the night. He had to get Stan settled down.
“But why, Chuck, why?”
“How the hell do I know? Why are you––” Chuck stopped when he saw the hurt look on Stan’s face.
“You’re upset, Chuck.”
“Ya think?”
“You cussed.”
“
Hell
is not a cuss word, Stan.”
“Mom says.”
“It’s in the Bible. Hell is in the Bible.”
“There’s fire in hell,” Stan said.
“Let’s not talk about fire
or
hell,” Chuck said. Because there’s enough hell right here in this life, kid. You don’t need to pile on anymore.
Chuck drove to the Outside Inn, the oh-so-cleverly named motel on Ventura, a block away from Ralphs. From here they could regroup, and Stan could walk to work.
Two anemic palm trees bracketed the driveway entrance, bending as if seeking to slink away from the place. The exterior of the joint was diffuse dull-orange stucco, like a couple of painters had slapped on a coat ten years ago then knocked off early and never came back.
After securing a room, Chuck showed Stan their new home away from home. Done up in American Plain Wrap. A queen bed, a table, small refrigerator, TV. On the wall hung a framed print, a rendering of a large, black bull looking straight out at them. Chuck thought the bull could be asking the question
How did I get stuck in a lousy dive like this?
“Where’ll I sleep?” Stan said.
“You can have the bed.”
“You can sleep with me, Chuck.”
“You flop around like a halibut, brother. I’ll take the floor.”
Stan said, “How long do we have to be here?”
“I don’t know.”
“Where will we live for the rest of our lives?”
Chuck guided Stan to the bed and sat him down. “Hey, you know how we’ve always talked about you getting a place of your own, a little apartment? Maybe now––”
“Don’t make me!” Stan said. “Not yet. I want to stay with you.”
“And you will, but if we just start to think—”
“Not yet! I’m scared.”
“Well
stop
being scared!”
“Don’t be mad at me, Chuck, please.”
“I’m not mad at you.”
“You sound mad.”
“Sound! Yeah, I make sounds! You want to hear the sound of a chicken?
Buck buck buck.”
Stan laughed. He could go from sad to laughter like a scared lizard from a rock to a hole.
“Do the fart one!” Stan said.
“You want farts? You got farts!” Chuck pulled up his shirt and put his hand under his arm and pumped out the farting sound middle school boys are known for. He had been the champion of that sound as a kid.
Blat blat blat.
Chuck hit them hard, slapping at his side with his elbow, making it almost hurt. He could get rid of feelings when he hurt. He wanted to now, wanted to hurt and stop feeling.
Stan rolled back on the bed, laughing it up.
Blat blat blat.
More laughing from Stan, too much of course, he could get that way, but it was hard not to laugh along with him.
Chuck put his hands up in surrender and sat on the edge of the bed. It took Stan a minute to catch his breath.
Finally Stan sat up. “That was fun,” he said. He looked around the room. “What’ll we do now?”
Good question, brother! We just fell down an elevator shaft with no elevator. What
do
we do? How do I keep you from freaking out all the time? How do I keep myself from falling further down the shaft?
“What do you say we blow some bucks?” Chuck said.
“Huh?”
“We go out to a big old dinner and maybe a movie. We forget everything. How’d you like that?”
“Yeah! Can we have pizza?”
“We’ll have two pizzas, one each, extra large. We’ll tell 'em extra cheese—”
“Yes!”
“We’ll tell 'em so much cheese it’ll be big and gooey and melty––”
“Baby, oh baby!”
“Then we’ll box up what’s left and eat it for breakfast, too.”
“Yeah!”
“And then we’ll have ice cream after,” Chuck said.
Stan let out a sound that was part rebel yell and part man sitting on cactus.
Yoweeee! Eee eee eee!
“I guess you like that idea,” Chuck said, “I guess you––”
His phone buzzed. Private number. A whisper of dread swept his mind.
“Yeah?” he answered.
A voice, low, said, “Don’t be bad now.”
Chuck’s brain felt like it clenched, actually bunched up a like a fist at the base of his skull. He pushed hate through his teeth. “You like fire, do you?”
“Don’t say anything to anybody. She would not have liked that.”
“You listen now, I’m getting the cops on this, maybe the feds, so––”
“Oh no. Your brother. He could get hurt very badly if you do that.”
Chuck looked at Stan. He was bouncing up and down on the bed with an ecstatic, ice cream-anticipation look.
The connection cut. Chuck looked at the phone like it was a dead animal, a dead thing sitting on top of his sweaty palm.
“Chuck, what’s wrong?”
Chuck said nothing. Behind his eyes, shadows danced.
“Your face is funny, Chuck.”
“That’s me. Mr. Funny.” Chuck wanted to throw his phone through the window, shatter some glass. At least that would be something, instead of sitting around, helpless. Who was this person, or people? Why was he being singled out?
“Chuck?”
“What?”
“I’m sorry.”
“Sorry? What for?”
“Cause I’m scared.” Stan started clicking his left thumbnail with the nail of his right index finger. It was his front burner nervous tick, always had been. “'Cause I feel like the wolf man might come.”
When they were kids they’d watched
Abbott and Costello Meet Frankenstein
. There was a scene where Lou was in a hotel room with Lon Chaney, Jr., who turned into the wolf man and stalked Lou, who was oblivious to the danger around the room. Chuck laughed but for some reason Stan got real scared. And starting having nightmares about the wolf man chasing him. It got better over the years, but every now and then he’d have the nightmare, intensely.
“No wolf men,” Chuck said. “Not while I’m around.”
“You mean that, or are you just saying?”
Chuck rubbed the top of Stan’s head with his knuckles. A little too hard. Stan said, “Ow!”
Chuck said, “I guess you don’t want ice cream, huh?”
“Do too, Chuck! You said!”
“Did I? Did I say that?”
“You said, Chuck. Pizza then ice cream!”
“Really? Did I swear on a stack of Bibles?”
“Aw, Chuck!”
“All right, kid brother,” Chuck said. “Get your pig face on.”