Mikey lowers his eyes to his plate of sweet potato fries and vinegary green beans. âYeah,â he says, âIâll be gone about three months. Itâs summer, so I wonât miss out on any school. Itâs a really big chance for the band. And Iâm the manager, right? Manager slash van driver, I should say. I mean, I donât get paid or anything, but maybe this will turn into something. Maybe a record. This is all super positive.â
He pushes the plate toward me. âYouâll be cool, right?â He looks at me with a look that really says I need you to be cool.
The fries Iâve stacked look like a tiny orange log cabin. Thereâs a buzzing in the air; some of the hanging lights on the restaurant deck are fritzing, going dim.
I count in my head: three months. June, July, August.
âItâs a long time.â He plucks a fry from the cabin and it falls apart. Salt glints on his lips. âA friend is subletting my place.â
I canât stop thinking that when he goes, I will be alone again.
âAre you going to do Arielâs class? That would be really good for you. You might meet some people, too.â
I move food around my plate. âShe said theyâd all be older.â
âShe was just joking. I helped her last summer. They werenât all old. And I think if she wants to help you, you should let her, you know? It might help her, too.â
I put down my fork, suddenly pissed. âHelp her? How could I help her? Hello, look at me.â
Mikey frowns. âDonât be like that. I just meanâ¦â He takes a breath. âHer son died. A couple of years ago, before I moved into the guest house. Drug overdose. I thinkâ¦I donât know all the circumstances, really, but she hadnât heard from him for a long time before it happened. Sheâs always talking about you to me. I think her wanting to help youâ¦maybe makes her feel more hopeful? She really was in a bad place for a long time.â
I suck in my breath. Arielâs son died. An overdose. Here I thought she had such a perfect, pretty life, filled with art and interesting things, all the time.
Now I know what she meant in the gallery. Why she said, âI know you.â Why that cloud passed over her eyes.
The thought fills me with a weird heaviness. Is that why she was so pushy with me about finding a place to live, finding a job, taking her class? To make sure I didnâtâ¦become like her son? Disappear, too?
I think of the paintings in her house. So, so dark, with just a little light, but the light is turning away from the dark.
âHer paintings,â I say slowly. âThose really dark ones in her house. When I saw those, all I could think of was that only a really sad person could have made them.â
He nods. âShe hasnât painted since then. She did all of those in a rush, right after he died, then she just stopped. Zilch. Nothing.â
He says cautiously, âBunnyâs around, too, if you need anything. It wouldnât kill you to get to know her.â
The mention of Bunny knifes me. I shred my napkin, gather the stained bits in a mound on the table, blow them away like snow. Mikey smiles. Michael smiles.
âSerious. Sheâs really cool. I mean, you donât have to be such a cold fish, okay?â
My face colors. âCold fish? What the fuck?â
âYou know, Charlie, itâs justâ¦well, you know. I mean, youâre not the most outgoing person, are you? You were always kind ofâ¦remote, right, back in the day? Now youâre more or less, I donât knowâ¦â Mikey stutters, sighs. âI mean, plenty of people would like you, but you donât even give them a chance. This is your chance, right here, now, to change some things. Make the right friends.â
âMake the right friends? What are you even talking about, Michael?â Make the right friends? I feel like our conversation has taken a weird turn.
âCharlie.â His voice has cooled. âListen. Bunny says sheâs seen you walking with Riley West. You know she works at Carusoâs, right? Across from Grit? Sheâs seen you two walking to Grit together in the morning.â
I twist a fry between my lips with my tongue and waggle it at him. Iâm mad, and scared, that heâs going, and I want to be mean to him.
âWhatâs going on there, Charlie?â
âWhy do you care?â
He grabs the French fry from my mouth and pushes it against my plate, an angry little mash of pale potato guts.
âRiley West was tremendously talented. But now heâs a tremendous waste. Donât go there. He has aâ¦history. You shouldnât get messed up with him when you should be working on your own recovery. Thatâs what I mean by making the right friends.â
âHe gave me a job. A fucking job washing dishes.â I push the plate away angrily. âHe canât fucking get up in the morning, so I go over and get him. Donât worry, Michael, Iâm just his alarm clock. I mean, whoâs going to want to fuck me when Iâm all scarred and crap? Not you, right? You wiped your mouth after we kissed.â
Mikeyâs face flushes. âYou tasted like beer, thatâs why I wiped my mouth. I donât drink, and you tasted like beer and I have a girlfriend.â
I canât stop it, it all comes tumbling out in a hot rush. âAnd what kind of conversation should I have with my potential suitor, Michael, when he asks me how I spent the last year? Shall I tell him that I spent it eating rancid food? Or helping my friends rob men in the park? Did you know that, Michaelâ? You left and I lost Ellis. I was alone and I did what I had to do. And now I look like a freak. And I feel like a freak. I donât think you need to worry about my dating life.â
His face is blazing red. âIâm sorry, Charlie. Thatâs notâ¦just keep your shit together, okay? The object is to move forward, not back, right? I donât want you to get hurt. More hurt.â
He reaches out and takes my hand. I try to pull it away, but he grips it tight. âThereâs nothing wrong with you, Charlie. Not one thing. Canât you see that?â
But thatâs a lie, isnât it? Because there are so many things wrong with me, obviously and actually. What I want Mikey to say is: There are so many things wrong with you and it doesnât matter.
I have one hand on the stone in my pocket and the other one trapped in Mikeyâs grasp. What I want to tell him is: You left once, and look what happened, and now youâre leaving again, and Iâm scared, because I donât know how to be with people, but I donât know how to be alone, either, and I thought I wasnât going to be alone again here.
And how is it even possible to be more hurt than Iâve been in the past year?
But all I say is âIâll miss you, Mikey. Iâll be okay. I promise.â
â
When I get home, I wait until itâs dark and then I ride my bicycle over to Arielâs house. I donât lock my bike, just lean it against a pole, since Iâm not staying. There are no lights on in her house, though I can see a stream of whitish light from the backyard, where she has some strands hanging. I walk quickly up her steps and put the little brown bag up against the screen door. Inside is the red, glittery cross, and a little note that says Iâm sorry.