Read Maverick Jetpants in the City of Quality Online
Authors: Bill Peters
Tags: #Humorous, #Literary, #Fiction, #Coming of Age, #General
At Necro's house, the lights are off except in the rectangular window in the basement that used to be Necro's room. I kneel down and look in. There's concrete floor where the carpet used to be; leftover hardcover Native American history books, a road sign, a leash, a three-ring binder, maybe one of
the ones where he kept printouts of Encarta entries on things like Utilitarianism, the Greenhouse Effect, Niels Bohr.
I take out a receipt that's been in my wallet since I was sixteenâ$2.59 worth of Gummi Bears from the Wegmans bulk section, on September 26, 1994. School had just started, I'd just gotten my license, and that night me and Necro stood outside the Ames and did breakdance moves and told shoppers we were the East Side Breakers and needed money to get to London. I pull up the grass with my fists, and dig into the ground with my index and middle fingers until they're swollen and there's a basketball-sized hole in the ground. I drop the receipt in the hole and armful the dirt back in.
The moonlight is chalk colored, shadows of branches visible. It's cold now, the season of cross-country and toilet-papered trees and amazing-tasting cigarettes. Good is not how I feel at all. But I do feel like I could walk past the sliding doors of apartment complexes and wander into parties by myself, give myself a new name for every day if I wanted: Colson McNeil, Kent Rigg, Brian Robinson, Jack Stelson, Mason Devereaux, Blake Chilton, Grant Jackson, John Puma, Ricky Esposito, Scott Grant, Dax Maysinger, Matt Helkinfauer, Jed Carlyle, Jake Mustang, Auggie MacIntyre, Griff Batmanson, Jason Grange. Any one of those.
I wake up another day with the sun bleaching the edges off everything in Mindy Fale's room. She and her parents have gone to work, and it's always quieter when you're alone in a house that's not yours, like you could stand in their kitchen and scream and hear a tiny ringing in the metal of a frying pan. Those are my keys, almost falling off her nightstand. There is the car, leftover heat from the summer fattening its insides. Nearly a month of this. For our two-month anniversary, she glued me together an ashtray with glitter-hearts, so I can smoke menthols in bed. She makes me dinner and uses real garlic. Big cloves, the kind you have to hit with a hammer to get the peelings off.
After her work, Mindy Fale brings me along to Meigs Street to look at an apartment, closer to the Bug Jar. The place echoes like a church: the sunlight inside it is tan as a
WANTED
poster in a Western; brick walls like a fire station; hardwood floors like a basketball court.
The real estate agent, a college-age girl with a tank top
and a long skirt, taps her clipboard and says, “It's a very young, hip area.”
Mindy Fale tugs my finger. “This place is so mine,” she says. Her hair is pulled back; highlights in the brown, the way hairdying and bleaching gradually age into hair-highlighting. She giggles and bites the side of my cheek, which really irritates me for a second, like I could have broken up with her right there.
“We'll take it,” I say.
Mindy Fale lets out a long “eeeee” in my ear, and now, I guess, I'm finally Platinum-Murman-Card Gold Membership Nate. No more High School Frito Pace-Offs. No more Rochester Classic Drivearounds.
Neither of us read the lease. On move-in day I listen to my bedroom get more echo-y as I move a few boxes and take my fifth last look at the four punctures in the carpet where the bedposts used to be. I take the tape of the techno song Necro and I made in my basement after Necro got that keyboard and we sampled me saying “My name is Owlie Fatburger” over Techno-Pyramid Beats. I take the Cosimus Belvende Propeller from the basement and wedge it diagonally into the U-Haul.
Mom buys me cubes of toilet paper rolls and paper towels; a silverware set; a placemat set with sketches of maple trees on them; a water-powered vacuum cleaner with the bubbles moving up the plastic tube on the body; boxes of dish detergent, with the metal pour tab that you need a Thumbnail of Iron to pick open. She also buys herself a new car and transfers ownership of her old one over to me.
The new apartment? I sweat through two T-shirts moving
boxes in. Me and Mindy Fale sit on the floor and use a turned-over plastic bin as a table for a few days. The bathroom is small and humid and has a way of retaining shaving cream scent but not soap scent. I buy aerators for the faucets; I buy caulking tape; I set up a lawn chair by the window and make a point to sit during afternoons and imagine cozy-sounding piano playing as all the different lives and whatnot walk through this city; I buy a broom.
I also put on my pre-faded going-out jeans that Mindy Fale bought me and walk with her to the East End Festival, where they tent off parts of East Avenue, set up white plastic chairs for the crowds, and serve wine in plastic cups. The bands playing are the Skycoasters, who say they're New York's No. 1 Party Band, and Nik and The Nice Guys, who say they're America's No. 1 Party Band.
The sky is the color of Pinot Grigio. Under the tents are women with bright white visors and tanned fifty-year-old men in pastel yellow shirts and Dockers. When me and Mindy Fale go up to the counter in the beer tent, I smell a combination of locker-room sex and rotting toothpaste that can only mean one thing.
Toby. Standing over us, yellow on the edges of his white dress-shirt collar. He hasn't shaven. His hair, and receding hairlines, have grown out, liquor sweat all over him. Which only makes me realize how much, now, I actually do shave. His lower lip is puffed downward.
“Oh Nate, you're here,” he says. He looks at Mindy Fale and rubs the corners of his lips.
“Toby, you know Mindy,” I say.
“Mindy?” he says. “You look, uh, healthy! You've reallyâI mean, it's good to see you.”
Mindy Faleâeven though she's fully aware that Toby's practically made a plaque that says National Night at the Stalls Award for herâshe looks at him, smiles out of the corner of her mouth, and waves with her fingers!
The sunset snots up in Toby's forehead sweat. He looks like he has pink eye. “I've got a girl too, Nate. We're getting married. She's almost eighteen.”
He crushes a plastic wine cup on the ground when he takes one step backward.
“What's wrong?” Mindy Fale asks.
“It's just that we can't exactly get married now,” he says. He slings his arm around Mindy Fale, which immediately has me planning for a way to Warp Whistle out of here. He sucks in his gut. “Can't get married for like, two or three years, maybe,” he says. “At least.”
“Why?” I say.
“Parents,” he says. “Her parents.” He smears his palm across his right eye. “They want us to break up.”
“Aww,” Mindy Fale says, like she's spotted a one-eyed stray.
“She's very school-oriented,” Toby says. “She said she had homework until eight, very grade-oriented. Whereas I'm more relationship-oriented. So until she can move out, we'll just have to wait for each other.”
“She will,” Mindy Fale says, side-hugging him. “I dated a guy who beat up a Wegmans cashier who said he was too drunk to buy beer for football. He was in jail for a little while. We weathered it.”
“I've just, I've been really kind of down, lately, on myself,” he says, face drooped, like a sad pie. “Between this girl, and ever since I Went Off the Top Ropes on Necro. I gotta get some control, you know. I've been on these prescriptions. But I take them and I'll think, for real, that out of the corner of my eye, that I see somebodyâthe mailman!âin my basement!”
And with that, after one last play in my head of the Toby and Nate Great Plays Highlight Reel of any time I tried to tackle him on the way home from some party in the woods, or anytime he played that VCR tape of “Bum Olympics” on
Life Without Shame
, I look to Mindy Fale, fake yawn, and I am no longer friends with Toby.
Except, I fake-yawn again. How long is she going to let Toby's arm stay around her? I raise my eyebrows and shift my eyes toward the streetâall of which are Classic Warp Whistle Gestures to let someone know you want to get out of here. But instead she mouths, angrily, “What?”
“That's why, very soon, Nate, I need to bang her,” Toby says, and, voice getting hoarse, suddenly, like he breathes an aerosol form of sausage: “The parental decree could come any day where they just tell her âno more.' After which my dick is fucked. My dick is a can of worms.”
Because, what Mindy Fale doesn't know is the last time Toby's dick was a can of worms? There were teeth marks on his neck, and not in a good way.
“That's why, Nate, I need a favor. I had to sell my car, I'm trying to take classes at MCC, take this downness I'm feeling and squash it. I need a ride, to go find her tonight.”
“I'd give you a ride,” I tell Toby, “but Mindy has to work tomorrow, and we walkedâ”
“We live three blocks away, Nate,” she says. “I'm a big girl, I can walk myself.”
I look at Mindy Fale, Warp-Whistle Gesturing until my face evaporates.
“Go on, go! Help your friends!” she says, shoving my arm.
“This deed will not go unrewarded, Nate,” Toby says. “This deed is, like, the Sacred Gold Coin, buried in the Secret Cave of Zargon or Whatever, worth 8 billion points. Let me just go tell my mom.”
Toby sits down at a white plastic table under one of the tents, and touches the arm of some arthritis-faced lady with a pink sweater tied around her neck and whose hair is thin like blond cotton candy. Which, I guess, is his mom, who I've never seen ever, in all the years I've pulled into his driveway.
“Why are you being weird?” Mindy Fale says.
“I'm not being weird! I'm trying to get out of here.”
“You can't be tired. You're off tomorrow.”
Toby slings his arm around my neck and we walk off to my car. The street lamps are turning on, mansions on East Ave, some converted to dentist's offices, others still mansions for whoever here has money, with goldshine in the windows. I think to myself: I wish I were bored more often. Your nerves shrink when you're bored. That's why time moves slower.
But, nerve shrinkage. Just reciting the things Mindy Fale knows calms me down: Nobody knows why or how cats purr. Or how the red in your eyes in photographs isn't from the film quality, or the lighting in the room, or even from the camera
at all. It's from the blood in your pupils, reflecting back at you like violent coins.
On 490, Toby has the passenger window down, forearm on the windowsill, turning the radio to the Nerve. We head into Pittsford, an electric-awning bread maker of a town. We turn into a neighborhood whose name involves an animal trailâFox Gulch Somethingâwhere there are pastel-colored houses and timed sprinklers still rotating in some front yards.
“This is her house!” Toby says. “Turn off your headlights! Turn off your headlights!”
Toby's girlfriend sits Indian-style on her front lawn, shin bones shiny. Her hair is dark and short in the back but reaches down to her chin in the front. Her shirt, a tank top, is supposed to be tight fitting but it's loose around her stomach. A lot of knee bone still in her legs, which makes me wonder how old she really is.
She folds her body into the corner of the car's backseat. “What's up!” she says in this guy-type way that's way too old for her. When she closes the door, there's a feeling of being vacuum-packed, the air sucked out as the door seal licks around the rim of the door. The radio's volume is ant-sized. I don't even get introduced. She's wearing blue sneakers that have orange shoelaces, socks that have Snoopy and Woodstock on them. Toby hangs his palm over the headrest, and she hooks fingers with him.
“So let's go
get
that drink already,” she says, faking a twang. “Pitcher of Get-the-Hell-Outta-Here Juice.”
Toby rubs his chin. “We could always drive to the Kove, Nate.”
Good God. Not the Kove. I haven't even told you about the Kove. I practically contributed lambs and small countries to God hoping I wouldn't have to bring up the Kove. The fact that Toby's bringing up the Koveâa Toby museum exhibitâis enough to make you pity him until he turns into his own brand of syrup.
“Let's go somewhere else,” I say.
“I was, shall we say, reminiscent,” Toby says, more loudly, to the girl.
“I could be persuaded,” she says, again, in a loud adult way that doesn't belong to her.
“Very well! But, to the liquor store first, captain!” Toby says.
The Kove? The Kove is this abandoned hardware store where Toby and his older friends who I haven't seen in years, people you'll never meet, used to drink vodka and wrestle each other unconscious in sleeper holds. Matt Sullivan, Mitch Keisler, Ryan Glasscock, last name actually Glasscock. They furnished the Kove with some sofa they stole from a curb, and some cafeteria chairs Toby stole from the high school. And, the other thingâthe only guy who has the keys to the Kove's padlock? Toby. Glasscock gave Toby the key one night when he was drunk enough to think he'd lose it, before he went off to college and became a regional accounting manager in North Dakota.
I remember, one time, how Toby described sex: like a hammer covered in skin.
My car crackles over some gravel at some liquor store parking lot, and Toby gets out to buy a cube of Genny and a plastic thing of tequila. The light from the store makes Toby's
girlfriend more visible from the rearview mirror. She frowns out the window.