Anatomy of a Girl Gang (9781551525303) (20 page)

BOOK: Anatomy of a Girl Gang (9781551525303)
2.58Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Kayos bursts through the door then. What is it? What's wrong? She vaults over the couch and examines Laura. Oh my God. What happened?

She ate a peanut butter cup, but she's totally fine, Mercy says, leaning back into the couch, studying her new manicure.

She's not totally fucking
fine
, Mercy! Her lips are blue! Kayos sticks her ear beside Laura's mouth. She's not breathing!

She's breathing.

You fucking idiots. She scoops Laura up and heads for the door.

Whoa, whoa, whoa. Mercy leaps off the couch. What are you doing?

I'm taking her to the hospital. I've got a cab waiting outside.

I'm sorry, but you're not.

What?

Mercy stands between Kayos and the door. I think you're overreacting just a teensy bit here. Yeah, okay, we had a little scare, but she's looking a lot better now, so we can all just relax and stick to the plan. She's already doing
so
much better than five minutes ago. Right, Mac?

Probably. I move to stand near Kayos so I can get a better look at Laura. Her skin still has the welts, and sort of a blue tinge.

She needs to get checked by a doctor. It could get worse, Kayos whines.

If you walk out that door, we lose a million dollars.

She could
die!

I can't let you leave, Mercy says, crossing her arms over her chest.

You're crazy! Kayos pushes past her but Mercy stands her ground in front of the door.

If you want to get past me, you're going to have to kill me, because I am not letting you fuck up this deal for us.

Hold on, Mercy, Kayos, I said.

In the time it takes to say I'm sorry, Kayos reaches into her waistband, pulls out her gun and shoots Mercy twice in the chest. I reach for my gat as she turns hers on me and pop her in the head before she can pull the trigger. She crumples to the floor, still holding onto Laura with one arm. Mercy slides to the ground in slow motion, leaving a streak of bright blood on the door behind her. I kneel beside her, squeeze her hand.

Mercy! Are you okay?

Yeah, just a scratch. A scratch. She laughs, and blood gurgles out her mouth.

Hang on, you'll be alright.

I'm sorry, Mac, she whispers. I fucked up.

It's okay, Merce. You're gonna be just fine.

How do you know?

Because bad bitches don't die.

She smiles up at me. Then a cloud passes over her eyes and she's gone.

Laura is crying and, I realize, so am I. I look over at Z on the couch, her face as white as the moon, her sad, scared eyes holding mine.

Did that just happen?

Yeah, she whispers.

I fold into the floor, holding my head in my hands. The smell of shit fills the room. I don't know if it's Laura, Mercy, Kayos, or all three.

Z comes to me and puts her arms around me. She smoothes my hair and kisses the top of my head. Together, we listen to the sirens wail down the block, getting louder and louder until they are upon us.

VANCOUVER

It is said that I am the youngest metropolis in North America, one of the youngest cities on Earth, but sometimes … sometimes, I feel so old.

SLY GIRL

When Thug and I got home, there were those yellow police banners on the door. Inside, the house looked like the set of a horror movie. There was blood everywhere. Hello? I called out. I was afraid that someone had come and murdered all my friends and now they were waitin to kill me. I didn't know what to do. I phoned Mac, Mercy, Kayos, and Z, but no one answered. I ran to my room and packed a bag of clothes and some food for Thug and left. I had about a thousand dollars in cash on me. I didn't know where to go, cuz no hotels will take dogs, and I couldn't just leave Thug there in the house with a serial killer probably hiding in the closet.

I wandered around Gastown for a while, tryin to figure out what to do. Got a two-dollar slice and a can of Coke. I decided I could just walk around until daylight and figure out what to do in the mornin. Maybe I'd hear from one of the Roses and know what the hell was goin on by then. But it started rainin, and I was dog-tired, my legs felt so heavy, and my feet were so sore. Stayin up all night wasn't as easy to do without meth or coke or K or somethin. Without really plannin it, I ended up at this old squat where I used to crash sometimes when I was homeless. I went in the side door and the usual suspects were there, sprawled around the floor, shootin up, snortin, and smokin drugs. In a way, it felt like comin home.

Z

needle$$ 2 $ay, we nevr got our million. Kayos & Mercy were pronounced dead wen da paramedix arrived & Laura wuz givn a $hot of adrenaline & ru$hed 2 da ho$pital. Mac & i were takn down 2 da $tation 4 que$tioning, both R heart$ $hattered in a million little peeces. dey $plit u$ up in2 diffrnt interrogation roomz. i tryd my be$t 2 protect her, but i knew $he wuz fucked Bcuz $he wuz 18. $he did a bettr job of protecting me & cleared me of NE & all involvement in da kidnapping or da $hootingz. i wuz allowed 2 go live w/ my parentz again on da condition dat i go bak 2 skewl & B indoorz by 11pm evry damn nyte.

it wuz hell. my lyfe turned in2 a living hell.

after $kewl i wud ju$t wandr up & down granville $treet, waiting 2 die. i'd $tay out till 11 $o my parentz & sisterz wud B in bed wen i came in & not ha$$le me. i coodn't paint. i coodn't draw. i coodn't wryte. i coodn't eat, $leep, nothing. nothing cood make me bettr. dey locked up my love. i had nothing left.

MAC

Well, here I am in hell, a.k.a. Surrey Remand. I'm awaiting trial. It keeps getting pushed back. I don't even know what day it is now. I just go where I'm supposed to when they tell me to. I've been in here about three weeks. It's loud. Chicks are always screaming and throwing tantrums and shit. I guess a lot of them are detoxing in here. I try to keep my head down, not talk to anyone. They all want to know my story, find out what I can do for them, get for them. I don't tell them I'm the leader of the Black Roses. I don't tell them about my L.C. connections. When they push it, I say I got arrested for shoplifting.

My cellmate is Nikki. She's a meth addict. She has stringy blonde hair and acne, and her body looks like it's eating itself. She is eighteen and being tried as an adult, like me. She was arrested for robbing a convenience store. I try not to listen to her as she yammers on about her boyfriend, her ex, her parents, her pimp, her cravings, her kids, everything. But sometimes it's easier to listen to her than get caught up in the thoughts in my own head. I don't like to think about my trial, about what's gonna happen to me. My lawyer says we have to stay positive, but that's pretty fuckin hard to do when two of your best friends are dead and you're stuck in a five-by-eight cell with a meth head. My lawyer is kind of a douche. Hank got him for me. He's got yellowy bags around his eyes and he smells like vodka and car air freshener. We're gonna plead self-defence, because that's what it was. I don't know what will happen.

I miss Z. I know they let her off, and I'm glad. Why should
both of us have to suffer? I've tried calling her about a thousand times, but her cell phone's been disconnected and the line at her parents' just rings and rings. God! I really miss her. If only they'd just let me talk to her. I wish I could have visitors in here, but I'm not allowed any until after my trial. Except for Larry, my lawyer. He brings me smokes, chocolate bars, a book, once.
The Client
. Larry's alright, I guess. Hank says he's the best.

Sometimes, at night, after I hear Nikki snoring, I let myself go, and I cry. I cry and I cry and I cry. Wake up in the morning and my pillow's all damp, and I just wish I could go back in time and erase everything that happened after Mercy said she had this brilliant idea. I could've just shut her down then, told her it was a stupid plan and would never work. But I didn't. I went along with it. And I fucked up everything forever.

For the first time in my life, I'm scared. I'm really fuckin scared. And the worst part is, there's not a goddamn thing I can do about it.

Z

ye$terday i $kipped $kewl 2 go 2 Mac's court d8. wen da judge read her $entence i felt my in$ydes bein ripped out.

Guilty.

my Mac wuz found guiltee of po$$e$$ion of a controlled $ubstance w/ intent 2 traffik, extortion, kidnapping, & 2nd-degree murder. $he wuz tryd az an adult & $entenced 2 lyfe w/out parole.

she iz da love of my lyfe & da onlee per$on who evr gave a $hit about me & now $he iz being takn away frum me. 4evr. i didn't realyze it until da ladee next 2 me put her hand on my $houlder, but i wuz wailing lyke a $tuck pig. da noyze came frum $umwhere deep in$yde my gutz. i coodn't $top it. i looked in2 dat ladee's ruined face & mo$$ green eyez & i knew who $he wuz. i knew dat once, $he had been beautiful, lyke her daughter wuz now. $he folded me in2 her & held me w/ her pipe-cleener armz & let me cry & $not all ovr her pink track-$uit. $he $hushed me & patted my bak, ju$t lyke a real mom wud. evn az i fell apart in her armz, i wanted 2 blame her $umhow. if $he had been a better mom & not a junkee crack whore, Mac nevr wud have gottn in2 di$ lyfe, $he nevr wud have ended up here, & we cood have been 2gethr 4evr & been $o $O happee.

now $he'z in a cage fo 25 fuckin yearz, & wat do i have 2 live 4? not a goddamn thing.

VANCOUVER

The streets are slick with rain and the girl walks alone, seeing only the concrete beneath her feet. Her head used to be full of colours, but she doesn't paint anymore. Instead, she makes etchings on her body with razor blades and waits to feel something, anything. Her heart sits raw and heavy inside her bird-like ribcage. Her eyes, dark as a storm cloud, were once sparkling with hope, excitement, passion. Now they are dull and downcast, and they hardly see the world around her. Like so many others in my city, she is ready to lay herself down in the street and give up.

I have watched her grow from infancy, watched her throw back her head and laugh into the rain. I watched her fall in love—with art, with the world, with life. I know she could have done anything, she could have been anything, but not now. Not ever.

She walks and walks until she finds her sister-friend, the laughing one with the sleepy eye. From her, she buys powder the colour of sand. It is enough. She also borrows tools: a needle, spoon, and tourniquet. She hugs her friend goodbye, knowing it is the last time she will see her.

As she lies down in the tall grass, the clouds expand around her, the sky opaque and shimmering, like a pearl.

MAC

After my trial, a cruiser took me out to Maple Ridge, and I was admitted to Alouette Women's Correctional Facility. They took me into a cold little white room with a doctor's bed-table thing. They made me strip. Then, this ugly-ass female guard with poodle hair snapped on a pair of gloves.

This is gonna suck for me, isn't it? I said.

Lie down, please, she said, and proceeded to stick her hand up my cunt and feel around for awhile.

Jesus.

Turn over please.

Oh, God.

Turn over.

I don't want to.

The other guard put her hands on my shoulders and flipped me over in one swift movement. Then the poodle lady spread my ass cheeks and felt around up there for awhile.

Ow! Fuck!

If you clench, it hurts more. Just try to relax.

I ground my teeth together and tried to think of something else. Swimming. Birds. Convertible rides on sunny days.
Ow!

Okay, you can get dressed. She sounded disappointed that she didn't find a gram of cocaine and a pack of razor blades up my ass. She handed me my prison uniform.

Purple, my favourite.

Poodle-lady raised an eyebrow. The two of them stood
near the door, watching while I dressed. I wanted to crawl under a floor tile and stay there.

They escorted me back out into the main hall where I was given two tiny bars of soap, a black plastic comb, a white toothbrush, a tube of Crest, a small plastic bottle of bleach, two latex gloves, and printed instructions on how to make a dental dam. I snickered, and the guard looked at me as if I had murdered her first-born.

Let's go. She took my arm and led me down the hall.

I kept my eyes down so I didn't have to look at anyone. They hooted and whistled at me from their cells as we walked down the dark corridor.

Home sweet home, the guard said as she flicked a switch. There was a metallic buzz, and the door slid open.

I stepped inside. Another buzz and the electric door closed behind me.

Hands.

I stuck my hands through the steel bars and she uncuffed me. She pocketed the cuffs and walked away.

I looked at my cell. It was a concrete room with a single bed in one corner, a steel toilet and sink in the other. There was no seat on the toilet. There was no window. A grey army blanket, pale blue sheets, and a pillowcase lay folded on the end of the bed. As I stood staring at the stained, brown mattress, I felt lonelier than I ever had in my life.

Other books

Jack Iron by Kerry Newcomb
Perfect Regret ( BOOK 2) by Walters, A. Meredith
Friends till the End by Gloria Dank
The New Jim Crow by Michelle Alexander
Island Hospital by Elizabeth Houghton
The Cursed Towers by Kate Forsyth
Alpha 1472 by Eddie Hastings