CHAPTER FIVE
Wayne ripped the first pair of rubber gloves
he tried to put on. Making a mental note to have a conversation
with their volunteer coordinator, who also ordered supplies, that
not everyone had "medium" sized hands, he slipped another pair on.
The gloves were so tight-fitting they restricted his movement, but
better ill-fitting gloves than no gloves at all. Now he was ready
for the task at hand.
Isabel "Iz" Cornwall had been admitted to the
hospital. Complications from drug withdrawal on her hopelessly
over-taxed immune system. The doctors administered high doses of
antibiotics while observing her for a few more days. Tristan Drust,
her girlfriend, dropped off her things to the Outreach Inc. house,
then disappeared mysteriously yet again. Wayne recognized the
restlessness on Tristan's face, the caged beast waiting to go on
the hunt. Revenge seethed in her eyes. That kind of anger had a way
of consuming a person, but she wasn't in a place to talk. Instead,
she dropped off trash bags full of Iz's stuff.
"The glamour leave yet?" Wayne passed a trash
bag to Esther Baron.
"What glamour?" Esther pulled on her gloves
with ease, but stared at the bags with mild distrust. She hated the
way she looked and was always at war with her body, from one diet
to the next, counting calories and miles walked in a day. She
considered herself too short (which she could do nothing about) and
too dumpy (which she was determined to change). Esther was one of
those people easily overlooked in a room. Not the center of
attention, not quick to speak, and without the presence or
immediate kind of beauty people gravitated to, she simply went
about her business. Her actions spoke for her as she dove into life
at Outreach Inc with both feet. She had been volunteering with
Outreach Inc for over a year now because she wanted to be a part of
the hope the organization represented.
"You know, the idea of helping homeless
teens. Most folks figure it's just handing out food, water, and
socks, and calling it a day."
"No, I'm in it for the long haul." Esther hid
behind the belief that she would always be seen as the outsider.
The rich white girl who lived in Fishers who occasionally slummed
with the poor folks to make herself feel better. White liberal
guilt as a fashion accessory. Whatever. People could think what
they wanted, she couldn't control that. She focused on doing what
she knew she ought to be doing. "Now quit."
"Quit what?"
"I feel like you're always testing me.
Pushing me away to see if I'll leave."
He had been. Sort of. He didn't want anyone
around the kids who couldn't commit to being in their lives for
months. They needed to see that folks would be there and be
consistent and not simply abandon them when things got tough.
They'd seen enough of that. "Well, if you say so, dig
in."
Esther opened up her bag, took a whiff, and
shut it again. It smelled of moldy cellars and damp closets. "What
are we doing?"
"These are the worldly belongings of Miss
Isabel Cornwall."
"Iz?"
"The one and the same."
"They're soaked."
"Yeah. Probably sat outside for a day or
two."
"Or a month." Esther tentatively opened the
bag again and peeled back a layer of jeans. She hated the sticky
sound they made as she pulled them apart.
"We need to go through her things. Look for
any ID or prescriptions that can help us."
"Help us do what?"
"Verify parts of her story. Establish who she
is so that we can help her get whatever ID, papers, assistance we
can. Any meds so that doctors know what she's on."
"So we need to…"
"… go through all her pockets."
Esther stretched the pair of damp jean out
along the floor and reached into a pocket. Something jabbed her
finger and she dropped the jeans as if she'd been bit. Visions of
junkie needles and a future living with Hep C or AIDS flashed
through her head. Gingerly, she opened the pant pocket. It was a
hair clip. "Oh."
"You okay over there?"
"Yeah. just surprised by all the random
things I'm finding."
"Me too." Wayne opened a pink purse. Inside
was nothing but damp panties. He tossed them onto the pile of them
he'd found in purses, pockets, and packages. "I have never seen a
larger collection of panties in my life."
"A girl's got to have drawers. Found some
over here, too." Esther rifled through another purse. "She's fond
of leopard prints."
"Found a prescription." Wayne turned a coat
pocket inside out. "Abilify."
"Found another one." Esther smiled at keeping
pace with Wayne's finds. Having two older broth ers, the blood rush
of competition reared its head. "And…"
Wayne paused with his hands full of bras and
a bewildered look on his face. The sight caused Esther to burst out
laughing. "What?"
"Here." She handed him a social security
card.
"Bam!" Wayne exclaimed. "That the biggie.
This should make getting her some assistance much
easier."
"It's almost time for drop. Should I throw
those in the wash?"
"Yeah. Only cause she's in the hospital and
we don't know when Tristan will be back."
"Or if."
"Right. But, as much as you may want to,
don't get into the habit of doing that kind of stuff. I know it may
seem like you're helping, but you wouldn't be. We're not their
personal assistants. We don't do for them what they can do for
themselves."
"Got it. I'll take care of this. Someone's
already here."
Esther toted the two trash bags, waving off
Wayne's initial move to assist her. Wayne peeked out the window.
Rhianna carried her newborn, swaddled in two layers of blankets.
Normally, he'd let her wait outside until it was time for drop, as
it was important that the kids learned and respected boundaries.
But he wasn't going to leave her outside with the little
one.
"Good evening, Rhianna." Wayne bowed before
her and waved her in.
"You so silly." Her hair flared, interlocked
lockets in need of re-twisting. She carried herself with a fierce
sexiness. Upon closer inspection, her worn, bruised skin added a
hint of purple to her sepia complexion. Her half-jacket, with
nothing underneath, exposed her pierced belly button and tattoo on
the small of her back. Over blue jeans. She had the sour tang of
unwashed ass.
"How's the little man?" Wayne teased the
blankets away from his face to get a better look.
"Good."
"What's his name?"
"Haven't made up my mind yet."
"So what do you call him?"
"Baby."
"Girl, you a trip. Let me hold him." Baby
struggled as if he wanted to crawl back into her womb and wait for
a better world. Wayne hoisted "Baby" with ease and noted the brief
grimace of worry on Rhianna's face, and it reassured him in an odd
way. Her attachment to the newborn.
The child was all Rhianna would know of love.
She'd spent too much of her teen years going to parties or hooking
up. Too worried about food to dream of a future. She had no room
for baby thoughts or baby dreams. And a still, quiet voice within
her hoped his thoughts and dreams would rub off on her. From the
moment she found out she was pregnant, she knew she didn't have a
choice but to be with him. She'd have this baby. Have someone to
love. Things would be different this time.
Rhianna's mother once
crossed a set. She had the rep for sleeping around, not caring which block they came
from or what set they claimed. And she
had a knack for choosing the precise
wrong ones. Word on the street for those who listened, had it that she once dumped Geno for
Speedbump, two up-and-coming young princes of
the streets. The two men exchanged
words. The argument was heard by
Speedbump's brother, who came down to get his brother out. Bama, who was country crazy
and only needed an excuse, saw the
brewing fight and got his weapon. When
Bama came out, all he saw was Geno and
Speedbump's brother after Speedbump. He didn't
realize or care that Speedbump had
broken away from his pursuing brother –
who only wanted to keep his brother safe. Geno caught three bullets to the back. He
survived, but he was never the same.
Dropped out of the game.
The streets buzzed with
the news, the blame quickly traced back
to Rhianna's mom, who was set to get a retaliatory beat down. Possibly take a bullet herself
when the female members of the crew
caught up with her. They caught up with
her at her aunt's crib. She called the police even before she heard them bang at the door.
Rhianna couldn't have been older than four.
Her mother beat her, slamming her face
into the bathroom sink, and when Five-O
showed up, she blamed the girls. The confusion bought her mother time. That evening, she
was gone.
"You alone?" Wayne asked.
"With my boyfriend."
"Where'd he go? Or does 'boyfriend' imply
much more of a commitment to the relationship than he's ready
for?"
"He didn't even leave a tip."
"Chivalry is dead."
"Said he was coming through
though."
"You see Lady G lately?"
"Nah, I ain't trying to hang with her no
more."
"Thought she was your girl."
"She was. Till she did King like she
did."
"Everyone makes mistakes."
"You hang with Lott?" Rhianna
asked.
"No, but he's been on the creep tip. No one
knows where he's at."
"Cause he know, too. You don't just do your
boy like that."
"We supposed to be family. Family can work
through problems together, no matter how hard, because at the end
of the day, we still blood."
"I ain't trying to hear that."
"If we can't find a way to forgive
and…"
"Ain't. Trying."
Someone pounded on the front door then –
either impatient with the lack of immediate response or just
noticing the doorbell – rang the doorbell five times in a row.
Wayne passed Baby back to Rhianna, his mood spoiling with each
additional ring.
"Hey, my dude." The young, white, red-headed
boy had a heroin thinness to him and the disposition of someone who
would sell out his dying mother for his next fix or to avoid
prison. A patch covered one of his eyes, the surrounding area of
his face webbed with healed-over scars.
"What's up?" Wayne said. "You here for
drop?"
"My breezy said I could swing through. And
I'm all about the free swing, you feel me?" He raised his fist for
a bump. Wayne let it hang there.
"I'm Wayne."
"My people call me Fathead."
"Where you stay at?"
"Used to stay with this one dude. Partner had
a cat. One day the cat turns up missing and he blamed me. Said I
let it out and shit. So he kicked me out."
"Did you?"
"I ain't trying to keep track of no pussy
that walks on four legs. Shit. Dude still owes me so I took his
bike and pants."
"You took his pants?"
"Wasn't like they were his no way."
This was the kind of introduction that made
his job both frustrating and exhilarating. Wayne had met many
"Fathead"s over the years. Nothing was ever their fault and trouble
just seemed to always – completely randomly – follow them about.
Still, they had their quirky charm about them – so genuine in their
utter bullshit – that he couldn't help but be drawn to them. Every
Fathead was an opportunity to show God's love and mercy. Wayne
stepped out of the doorway to let Fathead in. Rhianna rushed up to
him as if they were long-lost friends reunited at long last, and
hugged him for several moments.
"We'll be having dinner in a few minutes."
Wayne put his hand on Fathead's shoulder, nudging them
apart.
"Hey man, do you have any points?"
"We don't do needle exchanges
here."
"Oh my bad."
Esther walked into the dining room carrying a
large bowl of salad as one of the other volunteers for the night
toiled away in the kitchen. She hesitated when she saw Fathead,
then not wanting to stare at his eye patch, arranged the array of
salad dressing.
"No worries, baby. I ain't self-conscious of
this shit. My pops put a cigarette out in my eye when I was a baby.
Had a glass one, but I lost that shit. Got a marble I use
sometimes. You want to see it?"
"No, that's all right."
"Not 'Baby'." Wayne glanced over at Rhianna
and smiled at the irony. "Her name's Ms Esther."
Percy wandered out of the kitchen. Tipping
nearly three bills, he had a darker knot above his left eyebrow in
the shape of a crescent moon. His downcast eyes rarely met people
in the eye. Carrying a tray of cinnamon graham crackers and milk,
he liked to pretend that he'd made them from his secret recipe.
They were the last addition to the food set out for that evening's
drop night. Wayne stood at the dining room table and gestured for
them to join him. He took Esther's hand as they all clasped
hands.
"Percy, you want to bless the
food?"
"God is great, God is good. Let us thank Him
for our food," Percy said. "By His hands we all are fed. Thank You,
Lord, for our daily bread."
"Amen." Wayne clapped Percy on the back. He'd
come a long way from the shy boy too spooked by his own shadow to
speak. And there were still untapped pools of potential they hadn't
begun to reach. Percy radiated a peace about him, a simplicity many
confused with him being simple.
"Has anyone seen Prez?" Percy
asked.
"Prez ain't right." Rhianna sprawled down low
in a wooden dinette chair which only matched three others pulled
around the table.
"What you mean?" Wayne passed a bowl of
mashed potatoes.
"He stays up in his crib. Avoids us."
"You know why?"
"Cause of… how things went down. You know how
tight he was with King."
"Yeah. I keep meaning to check in on him,"
Wayne said.
"Someone ought to. He up in his room all
day."
"He back with Big Momma?"
"Naw, he on his own." Rhianna piled salad on
her plate. "He's just sort of… lost… without King."
King's personal mission, Prez, had come far,
too. He'd fallen into drugs, but King walked with him through his
addiction to the other side. Addicts could always find one another,
like they had a radar for that weakness.
Despite the familiar sickness in his stomach,
Fathead still chased after his high. Though he remembered the first
time he got high with crystal clarity – a memory driven home by the
fact that he had sex for the first time while high – the rest of
that summer he could barely recall. Not feeling whole, he doubted
himself. But when he smoked marijuana, it was like aspirin for the
soul and fixed the ache for a while. The shameful things he had to
do to earn only gave him more of a reason to get that high.
Shooting up was the next obvious progression. The first time he
shot up, he shot his load straight into his muscle. It burned so
badly, he didn't think he'd walk again. Luckily, he had internet
access and taught himself how to properly shoot up. Setting up his
rig, he located a vein on his wrist and got off. The high was
perfection. Effortless. For the first time, he knew wholeness. All
his hopes, dreams, and worries faded; fear no longer consumed him.
Life suddenly worked. A few hours later, it was over and he was
scared again. After that, it was a short trip to the land of an
addict's broken promises and second/third/fourth chances: snorting
crystals up his nose, drunk on Stoli, stoned on Ambien stolen from
rehab, breaking into his parents' house, and writing checks to
himself.
Fathead plopped down on the couch in what
passed for a living room in the Outreach Inc house. He shifted
without purpose, not quite knowing what to do with himself. His
family didn't exactly sit around discussing the day's events with
one another, so he withdrew from the dining room table, unsure what
to do with himself. His hands found a pencil next to a notepad on
the coffee table beside him. Without asking whose pad it was, he
began to doodle his name on the pad. An ornate "F" as if he
sketched what a tag of his name might look like.
"Man, look at you. You about as uncomfortable
as a fat man adjusting his thong." Wayne walked over to him. "Want
me to hook up the games?"
"I don't even recognize that gaming system.
This shit should be in a museum." Fathead covered his mouth in a
"my bad" gesture for cussing.
"It's free. It's here. And your alternative
is sitting on the couch staring at nothing."
Their Nintendo 64 couldn't exactly compete
with the latest game system, but it had been donated to the house,
in that way rich folks gave away their "old" things when they got
the latest model. Part of him chided himself for being so
constantly cynical. It wasn't as if he wasn't called to love the
wealthy also, but somehow it was so much harder for him. He hated
the waste, the excess, the sense of entitlement. Life was simple
and was to be lived simply. Plus, he grew up with this game system,
so he could beat any of the kids on the games.
Fathead picked out a hunting game that came
with guns that plugged directly into the television. Spreading his
legs shoulder-length apart, he relaxed his knees to squat low. He
pulled his bandana up over his mouth and turned his gun sideways.
He twisted his right and then left, popping the joints in his neck,
then nodded to Wayne.
Wayne did a sly double-take, staring at the
boy like he was a damn fool. "Does the mask help?"
"I'm more into it." Fathead raised the mask.
"You know they call me 'Wolf', right."
"Thought they called you
'Fathead'."
"That too. See, I used to raise timber wolves
on my uncle's property. One day, when we were out hunting on his
property – man must have a thousand acres – we found a litter. The
mother had been shot dead. So we decided to raise the litter. Sold
all of them but one off. My uncle decided to keep that one for
himself. Probably how I got such a good sense of smell."
"What do you mean?"
"This one time I was standing downtown on the
circle, I turned to my friends and was like 'Dude, I can smell
Noles from here. He's on his way.' Now Noles stay down on
Washington and Lynhurst, and sure enough, two and a half hours
later, he came walking up. I smelled him just as he was leaving the
house."
"You use the truth interesting ways." Wayne
hit start on the game.
During the course of the next hour, Fathead
claimed to be a trained martial artist and having died and been
brought back five times in one night. What Wayne had been able to
glean from the endless stream of BS that flew out of his mouth was
that Fathead sold weed and hung out with a rougher set than he
intended, who attacked him a few times. And trouble always followed
him.
Percy, hanging a few steps away from everyone
else, hid on the couch. Where the spread of light from the lamps
failed to blanket. He loved many of the people in this room,
Rhianna, Wayne, and Esther especially, but he sat on the fringe of
them as if an invisible wedge separated him. A recurring dream
troubled him in ways he didn't understand and couldn't articulate.
At first he thought about how his friends all seemed beset by
disturbing dreams which set them on edge. But his dream came from a
different place. The images stayed with him during the day. No one
noticed his odd posture, shoulders pulled in, a large man tucking
his body within itself if possible.
A ruined church, a place of hope reduced to a
darkened chamber. Overturned pews and a broken altar, the hall lit
by the suffuse light of dimming candles. A boy came in holding a
white gun – a pearl-white hand grip, white shaft – on a velvet
pillow. He passed in front of a fire. Two boys each carried stands
of ten candles. A young girl, in his heart he wanted her to be
Rhianna, came in holding a cup. The cup was pure gold inlaid with
precious stones. Percy knelt before the cup, ready to drink. The
liquid burned like fire and tasted of ash. Then he'd wake
up.
The familiar sickness rose in Fathead's
stomach and threw his game off. Eating probably wasn't the best
idea, but he didn't know when he'd next have a proper meal. He
hoped that something sweet would take the edge off his pain. As if
she knew, Rhianna brought him a plate with two pieces of pie on it.
He was struck by how sweet his fellow users were. That was, when
they weren't scheming to take each other off. Unlike Rhianna, who
had her baby to give her a reason, he was afraid to come off the
drugs. Bad as things got, despite the terrible things he had to do
to earn, the only times he truly felt worthless were when he didn't
have a girlfriend. He'd go home when he ran out of options. Then it
occurred to him that he had no idea what movies were out, what
television shows were on or if a new war had broken out. That world
didn't matter.
A coiled threat waiting to spring, Tristan
waited beside Iz's bed, her knee bouncing with its own energy as
she ground her teeth. The room door remained closed as she waited
for a doctor to make her appearance. This was not how she wanted to
spend another evening. She missed the days of sitting on the floor
between Iz's too-skinny, white-girl legs, Iz's fingers scraping the
jar of hair-braiding oil, foraging for it to give up the last of
its contents. Not that Iz was all that skilled at braiding hair,
but her touch was intimate and knowing, her very presence
reassuring.
Tristan shifted in the uncomfortable green
vinyl chair, which had no give to it so she never found a sweet
spot she could rest in. Her black hoodie covered her crest of
mauve-dyed braids and shadowed most of her face. She filled the
seat with her bigboned frame, though she didn't have a trace of
fat. Amber eyes with gold flecks took in the features of her
beloved while she slept.
"You about to jump out of your skin." Iz
toted an IV stand behind her as she baby-stepped from the bathroom
to her bed. A tattoo of a dragon on the base of her back on full
display within the flimsy hospital robe. The fabric of the sheets
scraped against her thin skin and she winced. Tristan flinched in
her seat, ready to bound to help, but Iz waved her off.
"Just anxious is all."
"It'll be all right. I'll be all
right."
"Look at you. A good breeze could bowl you
over."
"Doctors said I'd be fitten to get out of
here in a day."
"Shouldn't have been here in the first
place."
"I said I was sorry."
"Shit. No, baby," Tristan slipped onto the
edge of Iz's bed with a tenderness that belied her stocky frame,
more built for fighting than nursing. "I wasn't blaming you. I was
thinking of Mulysa. He did this to you."
He did other things, too. Maybe. It was all
such a haze to Iz. Her head pounded and her vision
blurred.
Though always on the scrawny side, Iz's body
had shrunk down to a prisoner-of-war thinness. Her sunken
cheekbones framed her face, a long nose embedded with a stud
appeared more so against the hollow pits of her eyes. The dye of
her black hair slowly faded revealing her natural brown hair.
Picking at her skin, she caught sight of Tristan's disapproving
gaze and tried to find something else to do with her hands. And not
think about the terrible burrowing beneath her skin. She wondered
if Tristan understood her shame, as she spent so much time in the
bathroom picking pellets out of her ass because her body was no
longer producing stool.
The first time she smoked pot, she was nine.
In the fugue state of her relapse into drug use, she accidently
shot up the piece of cotton drawn into her needle. The ride felt
like she'd fallen head first onto the sidewalk from five stories
up. She remembered throwing up until she blacked out. And Mulysa's
hands exploring her. The room spun.
Without warning, Iz sprang out of bed with no
trace of recognition in her eyes, and she lunged at Tristan. The
first swipe caught the meat of Tristan's cheek, the scratch drawing
blood. Tristan cocked a ready fist to defend herself, a survival
reflex, but caught herself. This wasn't the first time Iz had
flipped out, a kind of psychotic break. Tristan backed away, hands
held out as non-threatening as possible.
"Iz, baby, this isn't you. It's me, Trys. I
love you, baby."
Iz chased after her, a glare somewhere
between fury and pain, biting at her and arms flailing. Tristan
grabbed her arms and wrapped around her as best she
could.
"Come back to me. It's okay."
Exhausting her spindly frame rapidly, Iz
heard her, the light of familiarity filling her eyes again, and
they collapsed onto the floor.
"What'd you do to yourself, girl?" Tristan
whispered, closing her eyes to press back the tears.
Her dad had died from years of alcohol abuse
when his liver gave out. Or maybe it was the pills. Iz was too
little to remember, and her mother never had a good memory to share
of him. Destruction was in Iz's nature. She once took a pair of
scissors and tore up all the clothes in her babysitter's closet.
This made it hard to find babysitters, not that it stopped her
mother from going out. Her mother once abandoned her for two days.
It was the first time Child Protective Services was called for her.
Mother always left her to go somewhere to cop the best drugs, and
she was only about the best. She strung together boyfriends based
on who dealt the best stuff. When the school needed to get a hold
of her, Iz gave them the cell phone number of her mother's dealer.
And when she was out of money and her body was used up, she sold
one of her other daughters. That was the last time CPS was called
on her mother.
Iz remembered her first stint at rehab. She
wasn't ready yet but the court mandated a stint at the Beacon
House. When they found her, she had a spray can pressed to her face
as she huffed in the janitorial closet. She ran away soon after.
When Tristan found her in the alley, a prostitute beaten and left
for dead, but still dragging herself along the gravel by her
fingers toward her dealer, then she had bottomed out. Tristan sat
beside her during the worst of it then. Tristan sent her to school
and kept anyone who might distract her from her dreams at bay. And
it was Tristan whose anger burned so hot her embrace was like a
cauldron. "Someone has to give Mulysa what he deserves."