Itâs a bad day in the kitchen: Riley has asked me something, and that something is floating in the air between us, becoming heavier and heavier by the second.
Riley is staring at me, waiting for me to answer his question.
Rileyâs fingers are the color of watery coffee. How many cigarettes has it been today? Orders have been sent back: bagels are black on one side, the scrambled tofu is missing chives, home fries are brick-hard. Two plates broken, their jagged white edges kicked beneath a stainless steel prep table.
He says he needs this to get through the shift. He says the house has a black door and a blue pickup out front. The espresso machine is whining, puffs of steam clouding Linusâs face. Tanner is cleaning the tables out front. Julieâs in her office.
âYou have a break.â He takes a drag on his cigarette. His eyes are tinged with red. This morning when I came to get him, he was already up, sitting on the couch, smoking, staring at nothing, a peculiar, plasticky smell tacked to his skin. âIâm not allowed to leave during work hours. House rules.â He tries to wink, but it looks more like somethingâs caught in his eye.
âPlease.â A hoarse echo in his throat, just like Evan when he got needy. âYour shiftâs almost over anyway. Iâll pay you.â
I remember Ellis, tugging on my arm, her face frantic with need. Please, she begged. Just tell my mom Iâm in the bathroom if she calls. I told her Iâm staying over. Please, Charlie. I just need to be with him. Help me, Charlie, please?
He reminds me of Evan, too, when he needed a fix, just something, heâd say, to stop the motherfucking abyss threatening to eat my fucking soul, and I would steel myself, and wash up in a bathroom somewhere, enough so my face wasnât too dirty, and stand on a corner a few blocks from Mears Park in St. Paul just after dark, waiting for a man to show up, and to lead him to the park, where Evan and Dump would be waiting.
But Ellis needed that boy, and I needed her. And Evan had helped me, saved me, so I helped him. And now Riley is asking for help. And he said heâd pay me. I need that extra money.
Casper said it would be easy to fall back into old habits, old patterns. But Casper is busy now, a million miles away. The comforting beigeness of Creeley Center is a million miles away. I feel a million miles away.
A familiar numbness comes over me as I take off my apron and lay it over the dish rack. I donât say anything to Riley. I hold out my hand for the money and close my fingers around it. It isnât until Iâve slid the money into my pocket that I realize Iâve forgotten my lapis lazuli stone today. My fingers fish about for it for a minute, then give up.
Outside the café, the heat sizzles the dish steam from my skin. Riley didnât notice me hiding the knife in my pocket.
â
The man who answers the door looks me up and down and then past me, to the street, like he wants to make sure Iâm alone. Heâs chewing on the cap of a pen. His teeth are yellow. The house stinks of canned cat food.
Evan and Dump taught me silence is the best weapon. People will trick you with words. Theyâll twist what you say. Theyâll make you think you need things you do not need. Theyâll get you talking, which will relax you, and then they will attack.
The man falls back on the couch. I stay close to the door. Cats are everywhere: black-and-white, gray, tabby, milling around and mewling throatily. The coffee table in front of the man is littered with papers and cups, wrinkled magazines. âYou Rileyâs girl?â The pen in his mouth rolls wetly against his teeth.
âCat got your tongue?â He points to the sea of fur moving on the raggedy carpet and laughs. âHuh, huh.â His smile dies when I stay silent.
He asks me what Iâve got.
I put the money on the table. Assess, Evan would say. Always assess before you progress. From the corner of my eye, I see a baseball bat leaning against the wall. I see dirty plates with dirty forks and knives balanced on top of the television. The television is an armâs length away. My pocket is closer.
The man counts the money, reaches back, and raps against the wall six times.
âThatâs a big-ass scar on your forehead.â He tosses the lighter back on the table, leans back into the couch as he exhales. The cigarette bobbles above his knee.
I keep my face blank. Talking is what gets you in trouble. Itâs the way you get trapped.
A door opens down the hallway. A woman appears, sleepy-eyed, barefoot, her tank top sagging across her stomach. Her hairâs messy; long strands of dyed red and yellow hang in her face.
She, too, looks behind me, at the door, disappointed. The man on the couch appraises her. âWendy, looks like your guitar guy sent a little friend instead. Should we trust her?â
Wendy drops a brown bag on the coffee table. She looks me up and down, a smile playing at her lips. âShe looks harmless enough. Iâm a friend of Rileyâs, too,â she says to me coolly. âA very good friend.â
The man tells her to go, and I watch her swish back down the hall. The ash on his cigarette has grown. Slowly, he pushes the bag across the table with his bare toes, until it plops on the carpet. I pick it up, feeling the knife against my thigh as I bend.
âYou want anything for yourself, you know where I am.â
I donât answer, just turn and leave. I donât stop or look back until Iâm pushing through the screen door of True Grit.
Riley pulls me into the grill station, holds out his hands. He tucks the bag under his shirt. He whispers for me to cover the grill for him.
On his way to the bathroom, he motions to the refrigerator. When I open it, I see my thank-you: another bulky bag of food. I take it like a robot, no feeling, no expression, and wedge it all the way into the bottom of my backpack. Riley comes back more alert, licking his lips. He gives me a wink and goes right back to flipping potatoes on the grill.
I donât know what to think of what I just did or why. Iâve blanked myself out, erased myself. I spend the rest of the shift in a haze.
In my room, I push my green chair against the door. I put the bag of food on the table. I slide the knife from my pocket. I donât know how I forgot I had it.
And then just like that, all the numbness I had drops away and my heart starts beating like a crazy caged bird. Doing that for Riley, it felt good. It was wrong, but I did it, and it made me feel like I sometimes felt with Evan and Dump and what we would do: like, yes, it was bad, yes, it was wrong, but there was also an element of danger that was appealing. Like: how far could you take something before it snapped? Would you recognize the moment that something was about to go terribly, terribly wrong?
But I also realize that Iâm getting really far down the ladder of Casperâs rules and all of a sudden Iâm flooded with despair. I get up and pace around the room. I try the breathing exercises, but I just gasp, I canât slow down. Iâm too keyed up. Mikey said move forward and I went backward big-time and oh, fuck, here comes the tornado.
My tender kit is still wedged far back under the claw-foot tub, hidden inside Louisaâs suitcase. I donât want that, I donât. I run the blade of the knife lightly across my forearm, testing. My skin prickles and longing fills me up; my eyes grow wet.
Iâm so close to feeling better, feeling release, right here, with this stubby little blade. But I turn my arms over, force myself to look at the rough red lines ridging my soft skin.
Anything but that.
I let the knife clatter into the sink. Now Iâm kind of coming down. Now I donât feel very good at all. Too close today, with Riley and that man. Too close to what I used to do, and part of me wanted to see what it would feel like again, but I also wanted to make Rileyâs eyes stop blinking, wanted him to stop shaking, wanted to be a good egg, a keeper, just like with Louisa. Just like Iâd do for Ellis.
And that one time, that one time when I didnât help her, when she needed help the very most sheâd ever needed it, I did not help her and I lost her.
The room is closing in on me. I yank open the door. I could go downstairs, have one of the men on the porch take my money to the liquor store. Iâm just about to leave when the door across the hall opens and a small, dirty-faced woman comes out. I donât know her name, sheâs only been here a few days, but weâve passed in the hall, with her pressing herself against the wall if I get too close. She talks to herself a lot in her room at night, a lot of muttering.
âHey,â I say, before I chicken out. âYou got anything to drink in there? Iâll pay you.â I pull out a five-dollar bill from my pocket.
Her little eyes are like raisins. Sheâs wearing a stained tank top. Faded tattoos stretch across her chest. Names, mostly, but I canât make them out. She looks down at the money. My hand is shaking. When she reaches out to snatch the bill, I see her hand is shaking, too. She goes back into her room and slams the door.
When she comes out, she shoves a cheap bottle of wine, a screw-top, at me and then takes off down the hall. Her flip-flops thwack down the sixteen steps to the first floor.
I donât even wait to eat something. I unscrew the cap and take long pulls until I start to gag a little, then I pour the rest down the sink before I drink any more. It hits me quickly, the dizziness, the warmth followed by the little feeling of elation in my stomach. Itâs enough to tamp down my anxiety. I feel bad, but I made a choice. Cutting or drinking, and I chose drinking.
In the bag Riley gave me, I find a small burrito wrapped in foil. Itâs stuffed with chicken, shredded cheese, chilies, and sour cream. A tiny mountain of crisp hash browns borders the burrito. Theyâre still warm, lovely and greasy on my tongue. I finish everything, even the wet bits that fall on my lap. I pull the white napkin out of the bag to wipe my face and a twenty-dollar bill falls out. I can only guess that itâs an extra thank-you from Riley.
I pick up the book I checked out of the library earlier in the week. Drawing is a state of being, I read. An interaction between eye, hand, model, memory, and perception. The representational methodâ¦
I sigh, closing the book and pushing it to the edge of the table. I think of the woman with the muraled house, her garden like a castle. Soon, Lacey in 3C will begin to cry in her room, like she does every night, a snuffling, hiccupping sound. Schoolteacher downstairs will watch reruns of The Price Is Right all night, the bells and whistles and audience chatter trickling up through the floorboards. The men on my floor will stagger down the hall to the shared bathroom, groan and piss.
I draw like a demon, but this time on the wall next to my bed, filling up all the emptiness that surrounds me, some kind of mural of my own to wrap me up and keep me safe, until the wine pushes me into sleep.