Read The Cage Keeper Online

Authors: Andre Dubus Iii

Tags: #Fiction, #Short Stories (Single Author), #United States, #Fantasy, #United States - Social Life and Customs - 20th Century - Fiction, #Manners and Customs, #Short Stories

The Cage Keeper (8 page)

“Now you’re talkin’, bud.” Barry opens his mouth long for a bullhorn of a burp.

Freeze turns right onto Telegraph. The street is narrow but the sidewalks are wide, shaded by trees that look to Lorilee like they were built there just like all the different shops with windows full of clothes and stereos and hanging green plants. She looks out at two women on the sidewalk sitting on a jewelry-covered blue blanket under a tree. One has long braided hair that hangs down in front of her and they are both barefoot, the bottoms of their feet black with dirt.

She leans her head back against the seat and tries to ignore the electric scream and thump of the music coming from each side of her head. People are looking at them as they drive by and Lorilee wishes Freeze would turn it down. She can’t remember ever coming here before, to this place full of so many different-looking kinds of people, and so she watches them, sees in the darkened doorway of a building a blind man picking the strings of his metal guitar, his eyes hidden behind glasses covered with grimy masking tape, his brown cheeks sucking in past the bones of his face. She looks away to the other side of the street where two bald men wearing long orange robes are singing and swaying, one of them shaking and tapping a tambourine.

“Hey, you want to watch where you’re goin’,” Barry says, lightly slapping Freeze’s shoulder with the back of his hand. Freeze brakes the car for two women dressed in white tennis clothes, their legs long and tan and smooth-looking.

“All right,
babies!
” Barry says, sticking his head out the window. The two women turn to the car smiling, then turn back around and walk faster to the other side of the street.

“College chicks,” Freeze says. “Their faces are always on fuckin’ automatic pilot.”

Lorilee looks after them as Freeze speeds up, thinks of her own white thighs, which are sweating now under her jeans. She feels better after the food, is no longer afraid that if she moves too fast her brain will float up and tap at the inside of her skull just before she blacks out, but still there are the dark places that are not going away; usually they do.

When she is on her hands and knees scrubbing the carpet in the hall of her father’s apartment building, the sweat breaking out under her clothes like a warm thin oil to move better by, the shadows and voices that make her body feel like the home of other people become small, seem to go to sleep inside her; when she is opening a can of peas or shaking salt and pepper over a tuna and potato chip casserole after having just cleaned the whole apartment, sipping a diet Pepsi, they are quiet. Sometimes she has thought about it and wondered if it is the work that makes them that way, or is it being alone that does it? For they always come alive when she is not alone, when men look at and talk to her and she has to look and talk back. Any kind of man.

Whenever she walks down to the 7-Eleven for cigarettes or for her father’s beer, she tries not to look into the eyes of skinny Clifford standing behind the counter. Once he pointed to the plastic name tag on his chest and told her his name and he always wants to talk, standing there in his orange-and-white checkered shirt. But things begin to happen inside her when she can’t leave right away; warm spots twitch and breathe, stretch, then come alive in her mouth and down between her legs, inside the crack of her bottom. Like uninvited guests moving to let in more, they make her face grow hot. She leaves as soon as his hand drops the change into hers, not once looking up past the moving Adam’s apple of his too-white throat, and as she walks out into the parking lot she thinks he thinks, and all of them think, it’s because she’s embarrassed about her looks.

But then she can be curled up alone almost asleep and they will just be there; it will get bright in her head and she will see and hear them behind her eyes just before her bones relive their weight, her flesh their entry. She will sit up and light a cigarette in the dark. Drawing deep on it, she’ll rock back and forth on the bed. At first they will tingle and there will be loud whispers. Then their voices will come sharp and clear, swimming through her like electric heat, and they will start to fill her. Sometimes she will feel like spitting as she tastes their juices again and she will have to stand up and pace in her panties over the linoleum floor of her room, all of them becoming one inside her so that she is not she at all but them, until it feels as if she has never been her but just a part of them that they have kept in their lives for whenever they needed to let things out, a dark and evil part.

Then, as sudden as summer rain comes after the smell of hot street dirt in the air, they stop. She will put out her cigarette, lie back down in a sweat she can smell, then wait for her heart and stomach and breathing to slow down enough for sleep or the first gray light of day.

But things are yawning and squirming now so Lorilee moves over the seat to the window behind Barry. The pain is sharper now beneath her and she wonders vaguely if the dampness she feels there is from Freeze or is it blood? She looks away from the people of the street moving by to the two who she knows have got it now, the sickness; Freeze has put on his dark sunglasses and has an unlit cigarette hanging out of the corner of his mouth, and Barry, his face halfway out the window, is moving his shaved head in time to the music, tapping the outside of the car with the palms of his hands and smiling, Lorilee thinks, like a crazy person whenever anybody looks his way. She wonders if they will get as mean and ugly as her father. No. This is real bad, she thinks, looking at the side of Barry’s pudgy face staring out at everyone on the sidewalks, the bass of the rock and roll behind her reaching out and tapping at the back of her head, constant and teasing. She leans forward and folds her arms on the front seat, lays her cheek on them.

“Cooper still working that corner by the chink place?” Freeze asks Barry.

“Fuckin’
a,
Freeze. Now you’re cookin’, now you’re fuckin’ cookin’, man.” Barry reaches over and tousles Freeze’s oiled hair. “Toot town here we
come.

“Hands off.” Freeze knocks Barry’s arm with the back of his hand then reaches up to fix his hair.

“What is your
prob
lem?” Barry says. “We haven’t had a day like this in friggin’ weeks. And you got a stick up your ass like we’re busted or somethin’. I mean Jesus, enjoy it, huh?” Barry turns around to Lorilee. “Hey Waters, you ever do coke before?”

“Yes.”

“When?”
Freeze asks, turning his head to see her face near his shoulder.

“With Glennie.”

“With Glennie,”
Freeze says, raising the pitch of his voice. Barry laughs. Lorilee looks at him.

“Don’t forget you owe me still,” Barry says.

“What?” Lorilee asks then immediately wishes she hadn’t.

“What?”
Barry turns to Freeze then to Lorilee. “A hot fuck, bitch.”

Freeze laughs so hard his cigarette falls out of his mouth into his lap. Barry laughs then turns around and knocks out a hard fast drum roll on the dash. “All
right.

THE DARK-SKINNED OLD MAN clears his throat in the backseat. “Here’s good.” Dave pulls the cab over in front of a brown two-story building, its porch sitting so crooked he imagines laying a basketball on it then watching it roll quickly down and out the broken-toothed railing into the weed and asphalt lot next door. The old man is out of the cab, unfolding with stubby fingers that shake slightly a five-dollar bill. Dave reaches his hand for it, thinks two-thirty after a two-seventy fare. He puts the five with the others, reaches for his coin belt then stops, counts out three one-dollar bills, and hands them to the old man standing outside in the sun.

“Gracias.”

Dave watches him push the bills deep into the pocket of his flappy khaki pants then turn around slowly for the climb up the worn steps to the shade of his broken porch.

He is driving south on 57, the dead weed smell of the bay blowing hot at the side of his face. He picks at the chef’s salad in the clear plastic container on the seat beside him and thinks maybe it’s because he is polite and clean shaven that they don’t stand and count it to make sure he has not short-changed them like some of the other cabbies do. Once a big white woman in a dirty peach cotton dress found the extra dollar and started to put her arm through the open window at the passenger side, but Dave pulled out fast and loud onto San Angelo. He looked up into his rearview mirror and saw her standing there open-mouthed, her arm outstretched, the dollar still in her hand.

Dave flips the visor down and gets in the right lane. He takes the Berkeley exit and looks over the guardrail at a black freighter out on the bay. He follows the curve left and crosses the overpass into the first shaded neighborhood of Berkeley. When he comes to Gardenia and Telegraph he slows almost to a stop then pulls into the intersection for the climb to Berkeley Hills. He looks to his left down the crowded narrow street to the white stucco walls of the university, sees all the people only two or three years younger than he walking on the sidewalks, some crossing the street with books or ice cream cones in their hands, others standing alone waiting for buses, and their faces hold that look he has only become aware of recently but now sees all the time; it is a look of complete confidence, not so much in themselves, Dave knows, but in their steadfast belief that the world owes them something for the trouble they are taking to become educated. He looks straight ahead again and presses on the gas pedal until he hears the engine of the old Ford taxi straining against the hill. He turns right on Citadel Drive, parks in front of an empty space where there is nothing but sky then the tops of buildings poking out of the haze of San Francisco across the bay. He turns off the motor and looks out at the bright specks of sun on the water, sees that same freighter passing under the bridge now, its movement barely detectable, the long arrow-shaped wake behind it looking stationary too. He steps out of the car and walks to the edge of the overlook, shoves his hands into his pockets and feels the automatic flex of his triceps and upper back muscle. He looks down at the red slate rooftops of the Berkeley campus stretched out below, flat and bright in the sun, and the green fluff of trees that thins out as he looks westward and sees the wide expanse of the bay with its two long curving bridges. This spring he said no to his tennis-slender gray-haired father, and his offer to be a paid summer intern at the Baltimore office.

“I want to warm up to California over the summer, Dad.”

“You haven’t even gotten your letter of acceptance yet.”

“I know.”

“What about money? You know my policy there.”

“I’ll find something.”

Dave walks to the open door of his cab, reaches in for his lunch. He sits on the hood, which is hot beneath him, and begins to eat then stops. He looks out over the bay to the thin blue lip of Pacific Ocean just beyond the city, and sees the letter to his father that he has not yet been able to write: the letter that will say
what?,
he asks himself, that I have no soft place in my heart for those men and women I pick up at the Hyatt and Sheraton here? That I cannot do what you do? Dad, I will not make the focus of my life’s energy the designing of tax shelters for men who never have to worry about starving or freezing once they can no longer work; men who have not looked at and tried to help those who have to worry about such things. Yes, I’m still going to law school, don’t worry about that. You can still refer to me as your lawyer son at parties, Dad. But I won’t be working for the people you do.

TALL BLACK MARCUS COOPER takes Freeze’s money then hands him the white packet. Freeze walks back down the narrow passage between the two restaurants, the smells of fish and french fries and fried rice hanging there, then ducks under a dripping air conditioner and comes out onto the sidewalk. Lorilee leans against the trunk of a slim tree, watching how he crosses the narrow one-way street without looking either way, his hand in his right jeans pocket, pressed flat over what that money has just bought him. He reaches her under the shade of the tree, and says: “Which one did he go in?”

“He’s in there.” She points to a small bottle-cluttered window set between two record and stereo stores. “Did you get what you wanted?”

Freeze nods his head then turns from her and puts his sunglasses back on, looks out at all the young people passing by. Lorilee watches how straight he is standing, his hair so dark and wet-looking; she wants to reach over and touch his face.

“Shit if it ain’t Cruisin’ Bruisin’ Benito,” Barry says, coming up from behind them and hugging Freeze with his free arm. Freeze spins away from him; smiling so his face looks frozen that way, he slaps Barry on each cheek with two hands like a boxer. “The deed is done, motherfucker. Let’s
go.

Barry looks at Lorilee then grabs her by the wrist and pulls her after him. “C’mon. Don’t you want to watch?”

They walk down the sidewalk, Lorilee in the middle, a step or two behind them. She keeps her head bowed low away from all the people’s faces, wishes Freeze let her stay in the car or at least get some makeup to try and cover her cheek with. They step off the curb and walk across the street, Freeze and Barry taking their time, walking even slower when a small orange car brakes and the woman driving it honks her horn. Lorilee starts to walk ahead of them when she sees Freeze reach down and grab himself over his pants then push his hips out at the lady in the car.

Lorilee walks faster. She steps onto the sidewalk and ignores her reflection in the shoe store window as she hurries around the corner out into the open parking lot of Ameri-Bank. Oh no. She stops and stands there on the smooth black asphalt in the sun. She hears Freeze and Barry come up behind her and then stop too.

“Where’s my car, man? Where the fuck’s my car?” Freeze walks past her, his shoulder bumping hers. He looks down at the space he parked the Chevy in like he expects the faded yellow lines to tell him where it went.

“What the
fuck.
” Barry walks past her too, stands next to Freeze.

“Look at this.” Freeze points to a large square sign mounted on the white brick wall of the shoe store.

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