Chapter 19: Table Stakes
Bleak Magic
All good things come to an end. In this case, the good thing was my physics classwork, which is not something youâll ever hear a teenager say out loud. Thereâs an unwritten rule that if you admit something is interesting, theyâll just give you more work. But trust me, any sane person would rather do a hundred pages of pre-calculus than get pulled from class for a meeting with Mrs. Randall. And thatâs exactly where I was headed: summoned from the beautiful, predictable world of vectors and velocity to talk about my âemployment status.â
And Iâd been trying. I'd raked leaves for pocket change and a pretty fire. I picked trash out of the culvert with a stick. I have applied at every fast food chain and every supermarket, and the Asian market, and that would have been heaven on earth. Have you smelled an Asian market? But Iâm not the only one graduating; everyone is competing for these jobs.
And I donât have a car. I have a license, but not a car, you see. I canât honestly say that when Iâm emancipatedâfancy word for getting kicked outâI will continue to be able to use the car, which means I am the one on the bike. And the other high school kids with the cars get the jobs, so I donât get the job, so I donât earn the money to get a car. Itâs a catch-22, and worse, if I donât get the job, I wonât be able to keep the phone turned on. Iâll be the teenager without the phone, without the car. Thatâs pretty bad.
Of course, Mrs. Randall had her own thoughts on the matter. When she was young, as it turns out, jobs grew on trees. Why canât I do migrant farm work? Because Iâm 100 pounds soaking wet, and we donât have a migrant farm work industry in our city anymore, not since COVID. But Mrs. Randall is the sort of confident person who learned everything she was ever going to learn back when she was in high school, and nothing will ever change in the world ever again. So I tell her, you know, I have considered applying to an auto shop, see if they have a veteran career path. But she just kind of laughed. I donât think she believes that either. She strikes me as the sort of woman who would be willing to disbelieve sexism existed.
And after all this, youâre not gonna believe me, but I think she means well. Itâs the scary part. I think in her mind, she is giving realistic, actionable advice to a misguided teenager who just needs to get their act together before itâs too late. But from what Iâve heard from her, Iâve gotten closer to understanding her position, which is apparently what she was here for today. âI found you a position,â she said. âOkay, youâll be working as a fry cook.â A little bit more information led me to discover that a non-franchise fast food fish place called The Burger Barn had been hiring, and through some creepy government back channel, she knew the owner, and he was willing to let me interview.
âItâs not the same,â she told me, as she had many times before, when I told her Iâd landed the interview. âNot the same as having a job.â Iâve noticed. âSheesh, Iâm just saying,â she complained, âI donât want you to get your hopes up.â As if that had ever been my problem. âNo worries on that score,â I told her confidently. âWhatâs the job pay?â
That part was good news. $10 an hour. That was well above minimum. That was creeping into livable. An eternity later, I had completed her interview prep to her satisfaction. Itâs not like I donât know how to do interview prep, but I appreciated it, even if I was also kind of deeply worried that the last time she had interviewed might have been in the 70s. Something about the way that she described doing my makeup as being an essential part of the process threw me just a little bit. I dearly hoped it wouldnât actually come down to any sort of appearance-based judgment. Iâm not vain, but I knew better than to bet on myself as the top candidate in town. âUnder that rubric, youâre going to be fine,â she told me. âWith your interview.â That was a relief to finally hear.
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But now we had to move on to the real meat of my visit. âWe need to talk about your drug test,â she told me. I thought we had just done that. âExcuse me?â I asked her. âAs soon as you find a place in federal housing, in all likelihood, youâll get a drug test. They do that to everyone in the first week.â Well, I wasnât completely surprised. âOkay, thatâs three weeks. Iâll be okay,â I said.
Unsurprisingly, this was antagonistic. âDonât go telling me that,â she moaned. âWe do not need you out on the street.â To hear her talk about it, that was a real risk. It went like this: if I couldnât get a job and support myself, then I was dependent on the government. If I couldnât pass a drug test, the government didnât want me dependent on them. Bing, bang, boom, Bobâs your uncle. Iâm out on the street. Itâs not even that I didnât believe her. Just walk a mile in my shoes, damn it.
âIâll keep straight edge, all the way,â I told her, and something about the way I said it must have convinced her, because her expression brightened. âOf course you will, honey,â she told me. I hate when she does that. âYouâre going to do so well. Youâre gonna get a job, and Iâm gonna help you move in, and youâre gonna be all set.â
I cannot even describe for you how frustrating it is to have someone genuinely wish you well when you genuinely wish they would go away. But soon enough, she did. I had missed a class, but I didnât really care.
âYouâre going to get a job,â Toby said at lunch. âThatâs exciting.â He was genuinely happy for me. Heâd known how hard I was lookingâheâd even offered to put in a good word for me with his distributor, once. I know thatâs something people do, but there was no effing way I was going to do crime for my day job without trying everything else first. A girlâs gotta eat, but youâve got to have standards.
I could picture myself hanging on street corners, people thinking I was a highschooler in, like, twenty years. Iâd get arrested not for peddling drugs or for hooking, but for truancy. No, if I had to get into a life of crime, cat burglary was probably my speed. Dogs love me, I have very light footfalls, and I think I look good in black.
My natural hair is a sort of cherry colorâlike brown, but with a little bit of red in it, just a hint. My skin is pale, my eyes are dark, but nature didnât see fit to give me black hair, so I bleached it and fixed that deficiency. Otherwise, it would clash with my black and white striped outfit, which was my favorite. It has little puffy sleeves, but no pockets. You canât have everything.
Toby bleached his smile. I didnât know many people who did that. He told me that smoking can kill your teeth, and he didnât want that, but I donât think Iâve ever seen him actually smoking or brushing his teeth. He just kind of exists in a state of permanent bliss with that same lazy grin. I think, personally, itâs probably to attract girls. Evidence would seem to indicate that itâs effective.
âIf I get the job,â I promised, âIâll flip a burger especially for you.â
Tired and sad. Sometimes I wonder if he knows what those words mean. Heâd smiled like a puppy when Iâd told him.
âI know where it is,â he told me confidently.
âOh?â I said, with interest.
âYeah, itâs right up in Midtown.â
My heart sank. Thatâs a twenty-minute bike ride.
âIâll drive you there and drop you off.â
Yes please.
âYou donât have to do that.â
His grin was carefree.
âNo,â he said, âbut if I go to Midtown, I can get a slushy.â