Some kid is circling a table not far from us, gripping two toy cars. I can't see anyone with her, which worries me. I try to smile warmly at her but she looks away and says, âFuck you,' to one of her cars. The other car says, âFuck you,' back. The girl's head is big compared to the rest of her and I deduce that she's a midget. I'd been prepared to forgive this girl for her foul language, put it down to upbringing and all that. But the fact that she's a midget and is going to get freakier and uglier â and probably meaner â because of all the kicking around she's going to have to endure, makes it hard for me to care about her. Even though she could wander into the parking lot on her stumpy legs with her fucking cars and get run over. Maybe her mother is hoping for such a miracle. I scan the mall for an adult midget but it's the usual suspects. The paraplegic is feeding his parrot frozen yogourt with a stir stick. I really want
to care about what happens to this poor, stunted child, but the truth is, she scares me. I can't take my eyes off her, though. My Greek plumber shows up and asks for Cookies 'n' Cream then starts yammering about some Roto-Rooting he has to do. Even he scares me, the dirt under his fingernails, the hair growing out of his nostrils. The midget hauls herself up onto a chair and starts smashing her cars together. Even the paraplegic and the parrot start staring at her. I'm convinced this kid's been abandoned and no one's going to go near her because she's so hideous. I tell myself, if no one comes for her in an hour, I'll call the police. But then two officers suddenly appear. âIs Doyle Gregg here?'
âI don't know,' I lie.
âHe's in the back,' Yang Yang blurts.
The cops flip the counter and stride around to the back. I try to hear what's going on but it's hard with all the freezer noise and Muzak. The one with the moustache says something about allegations of assault. When I hear Jake and Larry Bone's names I scoot back there pretending to look for napkins. I try to make eye contact with Doyle to give him the opportunity to say, âShe was there, she'll tell you what really happened,' but he doesn't look at me. The cop with the 'stache grumbles, âWould you mind doing that later, miss?'
âOh,' I mutter, âcertainly.' As I head to the front I hear Doyle say, âI want to talk to my lawyer,' like a suspect on tv. His dad's a dentist, he must know a lawyer. The Greek plumber yabbers about how he had to snake somebody's toilet because their son flushed the limbs of his sister's Barbies down it. The nervous woman in the hat creeps up and asks for a smoothie. I prod Yang Yang. âCan you make it for her?' I'm about to go back and explain to the two fascists what really happened when out they pop with Doyle in handcuffs. He's taller then both of them. He stares hard at me and I can tell he wants me to zip it.
âHe's the manager,' I say. âYou can't take him away.'
âClose early,' the cop with the 'stache orders.
âThe keys are back there,' Doyle tells me. âYou know what to do. Don't close till closing time.' He's never shown this kind of confidence in me before and suddenly I'm so scared I want to grab his leg and hang on. âTell Mr. Buzny I'm sick,' he says and then they're gone. YangYang doesn't look too impressed. âIs he dealing drugs?'
âNo. They've made a mistake.'
âWhat happened to your face?'
âI fell down.'
âIs everything alright?' the nervous woman in the hat asks. âBitchin',' I say and start making her smoothie. It's when I'm tossing in the strawberries that I notice the midget is gone.
T
hey're sitting around eating slop Vaughn's cooked up. I head upstairs.
âNot so fast,' Drew says.
âI'm not hungry.'
âThe police phoned. They want you to call them. Detective Sergeant Weech.' She waves a slip of paper. âHis badge number's on there as well.'
I try to look surprised, do some glob-globbing and furrow my brow. âWhy's he calling
me?
'
âI was hoping you could tell me that. He wouldn't discuss it with me. You're sixteen, he doesn't have to.' She leans against the counter with her arms folded in principal mode, which is pretty hilarious considering she's in Damian's old pjs. Vaughn digs around in the slop with his chopsticks. Drew sighs, looks away, then back at me again. âAre you going to tell me what happened to your face?'
âI fell down.'
âWhere?'
âRight here, actually, the floor's pretty greasy, could use a scrub.'
âYou're lying to me. Why are you lying to me?'
âI'm not lying.' I watch Treeboy sucking up noodles and try to figure out if he's told her anything.
âHave you been doing drugs?' Drew asks.
âNegative.'
âDid someone hit you?'
âNegative.'
She throws her hands up. Characters in novels throw their hands up but I've never seen it in real life. She does it a couple of times, when she isn't gripping her head like it's about to explode. She sits down again and assumes an air of professional calm. âI don't understand why you're lying to me. Who are you protecting?'
âNobody. Maybe there was a robbery at the mall and they're hoping I saw something. Or maybe the midget got kidnapped. There was this midget child hanging around and nobody looking after her. She vanished. Maybe they're holding her ransom. Kidnapping's all the rage these days. Maybe she's in the trunk of a car somewhere.'
Drew starts smoothing out the tablecloth. When she's feeling heated, she smooths. âI can only help you if you let me. I'm not your mother. You owe me nothing.' I have to admit, it's nice to hear her talking half-normally again, even if she is pissed at me and in Damian's old pjs. âDetective Sergeant Weech said he would come to the house if you don't call him.'
âI'll call him.'
âWhen?'
âAfter I grab a bite. Do we have any pickles?' Maybe if I delay, Weech will head home for Sunday dinner.
âYou just said you weren't hungry,' Drew says. âIf you don't call him, I'm going to have to phone Damian.'
âI'll call him.'
âWho?'
âWeech.'
âWant some stir-fry?' Vaughn offers.
âWhy not.'
So we sit, the three of us, silent over slop. But old Drew can't help herself. âWhere were you last night?'
âHere.'
âNo you weren't. I checked your room and you weren't in it.'
âOh, you mean later? I slept downstairs.'
âYou weren't downstairs.'
âIn the basement.'
âWhy did you sleep in the basement?'
âRoss was with me. We were at a party and she wanted to sleep over.'
âSince when do you go to parties?'
âSince yesterday.'
Vaughn dishes out more slop but I hold my hand over my plate. âI'm wasted,' I say, âcould use an early night.'
âPlease phone the sergeant,' she says, sounding like she might pass out.
I take the slip of paper. âNo worries.' I hoof it upstairs and run the bath to drown out my call. I get Weech's voice mail. It sounds like he doesn't give a goose's turd if you leave a message or not. I act bewildered in my message. The truth is I don't want to talk to the police until I talk to Doyle. I phone him but there's only his dentist dad on the service who's probably down at the station trying to buy his way out of it like those parents who try to buy private rooms on the cancer floor. I serve milkshakes to cops, they don't like rich people, they call them dicks. I phone Rossi. Mrs. Barnfield answers and says Rossi isn't feeling well.
âWhat's wrong?' I ask.
âI don't
know, dear. I thought it might be food poisoning. What did you girls eat at the party last night?'
âThe usual. Tacos and stuff. Pizza.'
âOh, well, that could be it then. You never know how long those things have been sitting around.'
I can tell she's worried out of her mind, and that Rossi has told her nothing.
âWill you let her know I called?' I ask.
âWill do.'
I feel safer in the bathroom but the mirror is inescapable and, I have to admit, the bruising's nasty. I could pretend I'm sick or something and skip school tomorrow. Except then I'll be home for Weech's call. Purple marks are starting to blossom on my thighs as well, even my breasts. It could be worse. I could be Rossi.
âWhat's this?' Drew's holding the Ziploc bag containing Doyle's presumably semen-stained T-shirt. Drew doesn't usually barge into my room.
âIt's a project for Conkwright. Just leave it alone.'
âWhat sort of project?'
âA chemistry project. We're freezing enzymes in different mediums.'
She knows nothing about science, did her PhD on some dead poet nobody's ever heard of.
I grab the bag from her. âIt's not supposed to thaw. If it thaws, you'll destroy it.'
She looks a little frightened and for a second I feel shitty about lying to her, but then I think it through â knowing the truth would only make her more paranoid. She wouldn't even go out to bark at the cats.
I jam the T-shirt back into the freezer and scurry to my room. I boot up the computer to check for party gossip about Rossi that might provide evidence. Nobody actually uses the
rape
word. They use every derogatory word known to man to describe the skank's and the dyke's â that would be me â body parts, but our names are never mentioned.
Somebody knocks softly on my door and I know it's Treeboy.
âYeah?'
âCan I come in?'
âDo I have a choice?'
âWhy wouldn't you have a choice?'
âTwo against one.'
âDrew's downstairs.'
âHere in spirit.'
âI'll go then.'
âNo, it's alright, what's up?'
He sits on the bed and stares at me. âHow badly are you hurt?'
âNot badly.'
âLoggers once beat the crap out of me,' he says. âI thought they were going to kill me. Later, I thought wow, is that all they can do? I'd been so afraid for so long of what those pricks would do to me. I stopped being afraid after that.'
âYour friend wasn't so lucky.'
âHe was afraid and they knew it. You can't show your fear. Ever.'
I pretend I'm shopping on eBay, wait for him to get bored and leave. He's sitting so still it's creepy.
âI took Drew out today,' he says.
âYou mean outside?'
He nods. âWe went to the corner to get milk.'
I stare at him to make sure he isn't lying. âDid she almost bolt or anything?'
âA couple of times. Sudden movements get her going.'
âDid she hold on to you?'
âOf course.'
It hurts that she went out with him, held on to him, and not me. âThat's great,' I say. My alarm clock with the really loud tick ticks away. I shove it under a pile of clothes.
âYou going to school tomorrow?' he asks.
âPerhaps.'
âYou should.' He stares, I surf. Finally he gets up. âGood night,' he says.
âToodles.'
He closes the door gently and all I want is to be with Kadylak, just like Jane was with Helen Burns. I want to crawl into her bed and feel safe.
Nobody and I mean
nobody
talks to me. I sit in the can and read with my feet propped against the door so I'm invisible. Clarissa's on her deathbed in her dank prison with a priest hovering. Old Lovelace refuses to see the error of his ways and leave Clarissa in peace. His former pal, Jack, skewers him in a fit of passion. Meanwhile Clarissa draws her last breath, happy in her delusion that she's on the next plane to the Pearly Gates. Posthumously her parents figure out that they should have forgiven her and booted out her evil brother and sister. You have to wonder what old Samuel wanted us to get out of this ending. A conviction that we should be good even if it kills us? A conviction that we should be bad even if it kills us? Maybe his point is there is no point in conviction. One way or the other it's going to kill you.
I try to nab Doyle after Conkwright's class but it's pretty obvious he doesn't want to be associated with me. Victims of sexual assault don't win popularity contests. People feel sorry for them but that's about it. Plus he's seen my snatch with a beer bottle sticking out of it, which might be a bit of a turnoff. Rossi doesn't show up, which is no surprise, and Tora's made herself scarce, probably having an asthma attack or something. When the going gets tough, Tora starts hacking.
I seek refuge in the library where Mrs. Wartowski is comfortably clueless. She thinks it's time I read
Lady Chat-terley's Lover
. I tell her I already read it, went through this intense D. H. Lawrence phase reading about women who needed to come down off their class system and screw labourers. You get the feeling D.H. thought everything was pretty rotten back then. Industrialization pissed him off, and democracy, which wasn't really democracy. He was a Jew-hater, which doesn't win him points, but I guess everybody was kicking around Jews in those days. He took off, travelled, wrote about women getting the big one from gypsies or Mexicans. It's pretty hilarious that this skinny runt with bad lungs was writing about all these virile, swarthy types. Anyway, there he was in the twenties, coughing up blood, despairing about the state of the world and hiding out in Italy. If you think about it, those sickly types like D.H., Orwell, Chekhov
had
to die young or they'd have gone nuts. Because the world wasn't going to slow down for them, the âprogress' they disdained wasn't going to stop. That's another bonus for dying young, you don't have to watch more shit going down.
âHow are you making out with
Tilly?
' Mrs. Wartowski asks.
âGreat. I'm reading it to a friend of mine. She's really enjoying it. It's got a happy ending, right?'