Itâs so sly, the way it happens. Like a thread through a needle: silent and easy, and then just that little knot at the end to stop things up.
Temple is scrolling through her phone, sitting on the stool behind the counter, as I stack coffee mugs and plastic water cups on trays. The band never showed up tonight, and she let Frances and Randy go early, because the place was dead. Linus is in the back, reading a book.
Temple says, âDidnât you date Mike Gustafson? Or something? I know I saw you guys at Gentle Benâs a couple times.â
âNo,â I tell her. âHeâs just my friend. Why?â
She shakes her head and makes a disappointed, clucking sound. âAll the good ones get snapped up, donât they?â She angles her phone. âCheck it out. That hot little weasel went and got married in Seattle!â
It feels like moving through mud, making my way to her, bending to look at the image on the phone. Facebook, someoneâs page I donât know, maybe a band member, and there it is, there he is, there she is, and theyâre both smiling insanely, their faces shining. Heâs wearing a button-down shirt and a red tie with jeans and sneakers. Bunny is wearing a plain and pretty strapless flowered dress, with a crown of tiny, delicate roses in her hair. The roses match Mikeyâs tie.
All the blood in my body turns cold in an instant. I donât know what sound Iâm making until Temple starts shouting to Linus, âI think Charlieâs gonna hurl, Linus! Come help!â
Iâm heaving, but nothing is coming out. I hold my head over the trash can, make an excuse: âI think I ate something bad for lunch. I have to go, can I go,â and Linus says sheâll give me a ride, itâs almost closing anyway, but I stumble up and away from her, grab my backpack, leave the coffeehouse in a blur. I forget my bike.
I walk so hard my shins start to burn and then I start to limp. I break into a run at the underpass and donât stop until Iâm at his door, pounding.
Iâm ashamed that I still feel like I have to ask to go into his house.
He opens the door, pulls me in. Iâm sick, I tell him, tears coursing down my cheeks. Iâm just sick, so sick. And then, as though someone pulled a plug in me, everything drains out of me at once, and I fall on the floor.
I can hear Riley swearing and little Oh, Jesuses, and Oh, honeys, as he unties my boots, strips off my socks. He picks me up carefully, sliding his hands under me. Iâm dizzy. Heâs a blur.
Riley takes me to his bed. After a time, his sheets grow damp with my sweat and he peels off my overalls, touches the back of his hand to my forehead. He sets water by the bed, a small bin with a plastic bag inside. I throw up three times and he empties the bag each time. He asks me, Did you take something? I tell him no and roll toward the wall. I lost something, I lost some things, I tell him. I keep losing things. Iâm tired.
Riley says, Iâm sorry to hear that, baby. But he doesnât ask any more questions. He tells me heâll cover my shifts at True Grit. He draws on his cigarette and his eyes are the slick dark of stones underwater. For three days, he works in the morning and he covers my dish shifts at night. He heats bowls of broth. He sets a cool cloth on my forehead. As he sleeps behind me, his breath is a billowy sail against my neck. On the fourth day, I stagger from the bed when thereâs a knock at the front door. Itâs Wendy from the drug house, her red-and-yellow hair mashed under the hoodie of her jacket, scratching at her cheek. She says, I need Riley, whereâs he at? He around? Her skin is like the surface of the moon. When I donât answer, she smiles. Havenât seen him in a while, is all. We get worried.
You donât look so good, kid, she says. Tell him Wendy came by.
All day Wendy appears in my dreams, long-legged and smudge-faced, smoky-voiced and grinning. When Riley comes home late, late, heâs not so far gone that I canât press against him in the dark, work at him with my fingers, make him noisy, make him do things to me that he doesnât know hurt me, all to erase Mikey and Bunny, Wendy at the door, erase the gray turning back to black inside my body. We are such a terrible mess now.