Linus says, âThatâs so great,â and claps her hands. She pauses. âIâll bet Riley is psyched.â
I busy myself with the mop bucket, wringing out the grimy liquid from the mop. âYeah, heâs super excited.â I keep my head down, in case the lie is written all over my face.
âMmm.â Linus gets quiet. She scrapes the grill slowly. âI see. So how much is he up to these days?â
âExcuse me?â
âHow much is he drinking? Some of his prep work has been a little, uh, a little sloppier than usual.â She pushes a bucket of scrambled tofu to me and I peek inside. Ashes are dotted along the ridges of the puffy yellow hills. Iâm ashamed for him, even though I know I shouldnât be. And Iâm ashamed of myself.
Heâs usually asleep when I get to his house, if heâs there, splayed on his velvet couch with a book across his lap, a lit cigarette still drooping in his fingers. The bottles disappear more rapidly from beneath the sink, are replaced just as rapidly. He seems to have stopped preparing for the Luis Alvarez benefit in the summer, the guitar in its case in the corner. The notebook of lyrics and sheet music is shoved under the couch. Sometimes he looks at me as though he canât place me. Iâve started to come in and watch him and smoke his cigarettes until my own chest feels sooty and clogged. Once, his hand on the screen door as I went off to work, he looked at me and mumbled, âI miss you being here with me at night. Hard without you.â And that felt good, but sad, and those things tug-of-war inside me until I want to bury my head in the dirt.
I avoid Linusâs eyes.
âCharlie, I am an old, sober drunk. Iâve known Riley now for six years and I know his schedule.â She takes a deep breath. âHeâs in a downward slide and in that slide, we users will take everybody we can down with us. Because if we land in shit, we donât want to be alone in the shit.â
I stare at her. Linus, whoâs always helping people, always cheerful, an alcoholic? I guess thatâs why Temple never pours her anything to drink at night, now that I think about it. I try to picture her like Riley, but I canât. And what she says kind of pummels me, about him taking me down with him. I tighten my grip on the mop, looking at the dirty water in the bucket, like I can find some answer there.
She says, sadly, âListen, I donât know much about you, and I donât want to pry, and I also donât want to judge, but staying with him is only going to be hurtful to you. I just have to say it. Can you see that, honey? Like, really see it?â
I jam the mop in the bucket and grab the broom, trying not to cry, because I know sheâs right, of course sheâs right, but I try to concentrate on my work, to push the anxiousness away. The band tonight was some sort of polka-punk trio who spewed confetti, and little bits are strewn everywhere. The tables in the seating area have been wobbly for so long, the newspaper underneath the legs is frayed and greasy-black. I should replace it soon.
âHeâll be better. I know it.â I avoid her eyes, swipe at my own like itâs just sweat and not tears. âI can help him. You shouldnât just give up on people.â
âCharlie,â Linus says glumly, âIâve been in recovery for years. If I had a dollar for every time Iâve heard that, Iâd be a rich woman, and not working in some half-ass coffeehouse.â