Read Bad Things Online

Authors: Tamara Thorne

Bad Things (13 page)

BOOK: Bad Things
10.58Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads
“It's news to me, sweetheart.”
“Can I have some money? I could get some clothes for school.”
“I suppose,” Rick said, digging out his wallet. He found two twenties and handed them to her. “Receipts, change. I want to see what you bought.”
“Be back by seven,” Carmen added. “For dinner.”
Shelly nodded at Carmen, then turned back to Rick and batted her eyelashes at him. “That's not much money. Could I have your MasterCard, Daddy?”
Borrowing his car, being promised a car of her own—something he'd agreed to consider during the endless drive across the desert—and borrowing his plastic, all in one day?
She's going to milk me for all the guilt and presents she can because of this move.
He knew he had to stop it now. This wasn't going to be much fun.
“Can I, Daddy?”
“No, Shelly.”
Her face clouded. “That's not fair!”
He plucked the twenties from her hand.
“Daddy!” she cried, shocked.
“What's not fair? That you can't use my money, my car, and my credit rating anytime you want?” He paused. “Listen, Shel, if you want money from me, then you're going to have to work for it.”
“Doing what?” Sarcasm edged her voice.
The snotty tone made him want to slap her, but he knew bemusement was the best revenge. “How about gardening? You could help Hector,” he suggested with a smile. He glanced at Carmen, not wanting her to think he was insulting her husband. “This place is too much for just one man during the summer.”
“It's usually not so bad,” Carmen said quickly. “Hector's been in bed with a virus all week.”
“Gardening.” Shelly looked like he'd told her to scrub the house down with a toothbrush. “You're kidding, right?”
“No, I'm not. Look, hon, I know you don't want to garden, but I have to pay an extra gardener. Hector needs the help. I'm going to have to hire other people to fix things up around here, and it's going to take a lot of money. So why don't you look for a job so that you'll have all the spending money you need? Maybe check McDonald's or the A & W or—” he paused, trying to get her interest up “—maybe at one of the clothing stores you like. Then you could afford all the clothes you want, and you wouldn't have to fight with me about it.”
“In Vegas one of my friends worked at The Gap,” she said thoughtfully. “She had an employee discount.” She gave him one more daddy-dearest look. “Okay, I'll look for a job at the mall. Can I have the money back, please, Daddy? I need to dress nice to get a job.”
He handed the twenties back. “It may take a little while before you find work,” he cautioned, but she just kissed his cheek and raced out and climbed in his car—without asking. Shaking his head, he watched her drive off.
Carmen was smiling at him “Kids.”
“You said it.”
“Daddy?”
“What, Cody?”
“Can we go exploring?”
Ah, an easy one. “Sure we can.”
Carmen pulled a ring of keys out of her pocket. “I got these made for you. They've all got ID tags, so you go look around while I see how Hector's doing.”
“Thanks, Carmen. I'd like to say hi.”
“In a day or two, okay? I'm afraid he still might be contagious.”
“Sure. Give him my best.”
14
His father's workshop looked the same as it had the last time Rick had seen it, so many years before.
“Wow!” Cody stared at the huge room, then trotted around, heedless of the fine layer of dirt that coated everything in the room. In the boy's wake, dust motes danced up into the light.
Rick sneezed.
“Is this a barn?” Cody asked, turning a circle in the center of the room.
“No. It's a workshop. A
big
workshop.”
The huge, high-ceilinged room was light and airy, because of its white paint and the high windows and skylights built into it. “Conlin Piper had this built so he'd have a place to build his sloop,” Rick explained.
“What's a sloop?”
“A big sailing boat. After he built it, he used this to store the boat in the wintertime.”
“Where'd the boat go?”
“It and Conlin were lost in an accident on Lake Arrowhead many years ago.”
“Oh. What's that?” Cody pointed at a covered vehicle in the far corner of the room.
“I don't know. Let's look.” He crossed to the shrouded form and lifted the edge of the tarp. Something scuttled beneath the canvas.
“Christ!” he cried, dropping the cloth and leaping back.
Cody giggled. “You're funny, Daddy.”
Immediately he felt foolish. “I think we have rats,” he told his son. “Move back a little. We'd better set some traps before we do any more exploring.”
“But what's under there? I want to see.”
“You can see it later. It's your aunt Jade's old car.”
Cody nodded, satisfied. “What's that?” He pointed at the ceiling this time.
Rick looked at the equipment hanging from the huge center beam. “It's a winch.” He remembered sitting on the workbench and watching his dad hoist an engine out of an aging Ford. “My dad used it to pull engines out of cars.”
“Why'd he do that?”
“He liked to build new cars out of old ones. I hoped the Monster was under the tarp, but your aunt must have sold it.”
When I get through with this car, Ricky,
his father would tell him,
I'll keep it for you until you're old enough to drive.
Rick smiled sadly. Dad was killed before the car could be completed.
“What's the Monster?”
“He named the car for Frankenstein's monster because they were both built out of old parts.”
Cody laughed, delighted.
His dad had worked on the hotrod through most of Rick's life. Remembering all the hours he'd spent out there with his dad, talking, laughing, working, planning, made him realize that he'd forgotten many of the good things from his childhood, not just the bad.
Tears sprang in his eyes, and he roughly wiped them away. Relieved that Cody hadn't noticed, he crossed to the workbench. A small hand-lettered sign hanging above the counter read,
IF IT WORKS, TAKE IT APART AND SEE WHY.
Rick smiled, blinking back more tears. His father always joked that it was the Piper family motto.
God, he missed his father.
“Daddy?”
His own son took his hand and tugged. “What's wrong, Daddy? Are you crying?”
“No, no. Just got some dust in my eyes. What do you say we see what's in these drawers?”
They opened drawer after drawer, and Rick was glad to find that evidently only the hotrod had been removed. The metalworking tools were all there: the acetylene torches, the cutting tools and hammers. Two welding masks filled one drawer. They'd called them Martian masks, he and his dad. None of it had been touched since the last time he'd used them, a few months before leaving home.
Three tall cabinets stood at the end of the long workbench. Rick opened the first one and let the good memories stored within flow over him, He'd spent a lot of time out here helping his dad—the workshop had been a place where he didn't have to contend with his brother, and that made it all the better. As time passed, he'd even found a hobby of his own, one that pleased his father, who wasn't at all concerned that Rick wasn't especially interested in building cars. Instead, he built metal models, which were a lot better than the plastic Revels of the Mummy and Dracula, because he built them from scratch, with only his dad, and later, Carmen, lending an occasional hand.
Gently he lifted a foot-tall brass and copper piece out of the cabinet. He'd built it several years after his parents died.
It was a skeleton, begun as an
El Día de los Muertos
figure meant to be a Halloween gift for Carmen. Originally it held a guitar he'd snipped and torched from distressed metal and wore a sombrero, but those accessories were stored in the back of the cabinet because he'd transformed it into a sculpture of Big Jack, giving it a spray of little copper leaves to hold and filling its rib cage, with more. As proud as he was of it, he couldn't bear to look at the piece, and hence, he'd never given it to Carmen.
“Wow! What's that?”
“It's sort of a Halloween ornament,” Rick said, handing the figure to Cody. “In Mexico they make all sorts of skeleton decorations for the Day of the Dead.” Involuntarily he shivered, but forced himself to go on. “Usually they're made out of papier-mâché, but I made this one out of metal.”
Cody turned it in his small hands.
“You
made this?”
He couldn't help being pleased as hell. “Yes. When I was twelve or thirteen. Do you like it?”
“It's cool!”
“Would you like to have it?”
“Yeah!” He turned it in his hands. “What's he holding?”
“Leaves. They aren't too good, are they?”
Cody shrugged. “Why's he got leaves?”
No jack stories,
Rick thought. “The Mexican figures usually hold something representing a person's profession or hobby. A doctor might have a stethoscope or hypodermic, a singer might carry a guitar—”
“This one's a gardener, right?”
“Right.”
Cody continued to turn the figure in his hands, and his happy expression filled Rick with more pleasure than he'd felt in a long time. Smiling to himself, he looked back in the cabinets, saw his other, lesser efforts, and remembered how much he'd enjoyed working with his hands.
Maybe I'll take this up again,
he thought.
Maybe Cody would like to learn how.
A sculpture hidden behind some copper squares caught his eye, and he lifted it gingerly from the shelf. It was a small, angular horse, the last thing he'd worked on before he'd left home. He turned it in his hands, thinking the workmanship wasn't too shabby. The horse and its saddle were complete, but he'd never even started the horse's rider, Don Quixote.
Knight of La Mancha,
he thought fondly.
Slayer of windmills.
His hero.
Pretty weird hero, Piper.
But there was something grand about the character, something he had always admired and identified with.
You identified with the quixotism, Piper, because you were as nuts as the don was.
Fondly he turned the figure in his hands, thinking that he'd like to do this again someday. He envisioned a life-size Don Quixote mounted near the koi pond, his tribute to Cervantes and Daumier, and craziness.
What the hell. I think I'll do it.
It would be a talisman to keep his own imaginary demons at bay.
“Daddy!”
Rick whirled to see Cody backing slowly away from the shrouded car. He took three quick steps forward and snagged his son up, scratching his wrist on the skeleton the boy clutched to his chest.
“What's wrong, Cody?”
“There's somebody in there.”
Rick could feel Cody's heartbeat hammering against his hand. He tried to sound calm. “Why do you think someone's in there?”
“I looked. I looked under the sheet, and somebody looked back.”
“From where? The car?”
“Uh-huh.” Cody buried his head against Rick's shoulder.
“Cody, listen to me. You didn't see anyone. You just imagined you did.”
Ricky, you didn't see anything. You imagined it.
How many times had he heard that himself? And now he was saying it to his own son.
“I saw it.”
“I'm going to set you down and we'll both look, okay?”
“No.”
Relieved, Rick patted his son's back, keeping his eye on the car. “Listen, Cody, I'm sure there's something under there, but it's just a rat. A big old rat. That's probably what you saw, that or your own reflection in the glass.”
“Uh-uh. No way.”
“If you're sure, then I
have
to look, Cody.”
The boy backed into the workshop's doorway. “Okay. Look.”
Heart pounding, Rick flung the tarp back. But there was nothing in the car but mounds of antique trash and stuffing from the seats. He took a deep breath. “It's rats, Cody. They're nesting in the upholstery. He dropped the tarp back over the Rambler. “Let's go in now, son. Tomorrow we'll buy some traps.”
15
Shelly returned from the mall with a poet shirt, a pair of Guess jeans, and eighty-five cents in change, knowing her dad was going to be pissed. He was totally hung up on value-shopping, as he called it, which meant he thought she should buy last season's clothes for next season, or worse—for the following year. Christ, he could be a pain in the ass.
She locked the car and knocked on the front door, and Carmen, who seemed okay but kind of nosy, let her in. As she carried her bags up to her room, she thought that at least Dad probably wouldn't make her take the clothes back—he'd say she should, but he was a softie, and she'd get off with the same old lecture, which was an annoying but small price to pay. She removed the tags from the clothes before putting them away, just in case.
Dad wasn't that bad overall, she guessed. He was just really,
really
ignorant. He'd always tell her he'd get smarter when she was twenty-five or so, and she knew that was supposed to be a joke, but it really pissed her off. The man could be so self-righteous.
Closing the closet, she crossed to the north window and opened it, breathing in the cool, citrus-scented breeze. Below, she could see the shingled roof of Carmen's little house rising up in the middle of the citrus orchard. It'd be great having all that fresh-squeezed available anytime she wanted it. Except for squeezing it, of course—but maybe Carmen would do that.
In a way, she realized, she was glad they moved here, because her father probably wouldn't be on TV anymore. Almost all her friends—her
girl
friends—went nuts over him, always wanting to come over and stuff. They'd act stupid and flirt when he was around, and when he wasn't, they'd tell her how lucky she was, how cute he was, blah, blah, blah. That bimbo Sally Dugan, who was a grade behind her, for Christ's sake, even had the audacity to ask if she thought her dad would go out with her. Shelly wanted to freak, but instead she told Jill to go ahead and ask, because if there was one good thing about her father, it was his frigging code of honor. That's what he called it.
The good part was that she knew he'd never screw around with her girlfriends, even if he found a whole pile of them in his bed. The bad part was that he quizzed her dates to hell and back and he didn't approve of half of them. He'd let her go out, but he didn't approve. To his credit, he'd only forbidden her to date two guys. The first was Sterno Stevens, who rode a hawg—and she was sort of glad Dad had interfered since Sterno was trying to talk her into getting his name tattooed on her butt. The other was Starman Henessey. That happened only a few weeks ago, and she'd almost run away over it. Dad would shit a brick if he knew that Starman himself had talked her out of it.
She turned to the west window and pushed it open. There wasn't much to see, just a flagstone path leading toward the front yard and the little roof over the kitchen door below. And a lot of green. Grass, pine trees, honeysuckle, junk like that. Sighing, she flopped on the queen-sized bed. Dad sure made life hell when he didn't like her dates. That's why she'd tried to keep Starman from him—he was twenty-two and definitely off limits, if Daddy had his way.
She sat up and looked around the room. Something was missing. A television set.
There was one downstairs in the living room, and she decided it was time to get acquainted with it. She rose and left the room, going around the corner to the main staircase since she didn't want to go through the kitchen and have to bullshit with Carmen.
Entering the living room, she quietly approached the TV.
“Girl, what's your name?”
Shelly jumped about out of her skin, then whirled to see a gross old lady sitting in the easy chair, a pair of whining poodles in her lap. Jade.
“I gotta go,” Shelly said.
“No, girl. Sit down. What's your name?”
“Shelly.”
And hell began. She sat there and listened to the old battle-ax yammer on and on and wished she hadn't come back to the house so soon. She even started to wish she'd taken the Celica back over the Cajon Pass, and had just kept driving until she was back in Las Vegas.
Jade was telling her all about her poodles, but Shelly was thinking about the day. She'd checked out the town, and decided it wasn't as nerdy as she'd feared. The mall was small, but it contained all the right stores: The Gap, The Express, and Nordstrom's. And on the outskirts of town there was a real prize, the A & W root beer stand her dad had mentioned. The parking lot had been filled with mini trucks, four-by-fours, Trans Ams, and restored classics, the kind of cars acquired by rich teenagers—the kind she wanted to be friends with. Her spirit had soared as she pulled Dad's flashy little Celica into the lot. Inside, she found extremely cute guys behind the counter, who, it turned out, would also be seniors at Santo Verde High. One of them introduced her to some of the other kids in the restaurant, and by the time she finally left, she felt like she'd already made some friends.
Now here she was, back home, ready to forgive her father, at least as long as he didn't bitch too much about the new clothes. But he was nowhere to be seen. Instead, she was trapped by Jade, who was every bit as horrible as her dad had said. And more.
“What kind of name is ‘Shelly'?” The old Ewebean fixed her beady little eyes on her. “What's it short for?”
Shelly resisted the urge to shrink back in the ratty gold easy chair. She glanced out the living room window, but no one was coming to save her. “It's not short for anything. It's my name.”
Jade sniffed, and the smelly poodles at her feet both looked at her. “Poor excuse for a name. It's not surprising, I suppose, considering your father.”
“What do you mean by that?”
“Richard was always a . . . a weak child. He had no backbone. He was afraid of his own shadow. A weak man chooses a weak name.” The old bat shook her head.
She'd never thought about her name much, but now she felt like defending it—and her father—but she couldn't make herself meet that steely-eyed gaze. She looked at her knees instead. “My father,” she said softly, “isn't afraid of anything.”
“Shelly, you're back early.”
She looked up to see her dad standing in the dining room doorway, along with Cody. His dark hair was windblown, and his normally pale skin was flushed with color. He looked like he'd been running. Her brother's eyes were bright as he trotted across the room and thrust something copper-colored at her.
“Look, Shel, look what Daddy gave me. He made it when he was a kid.”
Normally she would have said something obnoxious, but she was so glad to see them, she took the thing and turned it in her hands. “Cool,” she told Cody. “What is it?”
“It's a Mexican Halloween skeleton.”
“For
El Día de los Muertos,
“Dad explained, as if that was supposed to mean something to her.
Jade snorted. “Useless junk.”
“I like it,” Shelly said, looking up at her father. “I didn't know you were an artist, Dad.” She threw Jade a fuck-you glance.
He looked amazed, then smiled and shrugged. “It could be better. Did you have a nice afternoon?”
She nodded. “I put in job apps at The Limited and Miller's Outpost. I met some kids at the A & W, too.”
He smiled. “That's where I used to hang out. Everybody showed off their cars there.”
“They still do, Daddy. All the kids had cars, nice cars. Do you think . . . I mean, the high school is so far away . . .”
“We'll find you a car, hon.”
Shelly hardly believed her ears. She'd wormed a promise to think about it out of him while they were driving here, but this was a voluntary statement: It meant a whole lot more. She handed the metal skeleton back to Cody, then grabbed her father and hugged him. “Thank you, Daddy.”
He beamed at her. “A girl's gotta have wheels, right?”
“Right,” she said, vaguely aware of Jade's disgruntled snort. “Can I have a VW Bug?”
“Maybe. If we can find a good used one.”
“What kinda car did you have, Daddy?” Cody asked.
“I didn't have a car,” he said, staring in Jade's direction.
“Why not?” Shelly asked in amazement. “Your family was loaded.”
“He didn't need a car,” Jade intoned. “And, Richard,
she
doesn't need one either.” She pronounced the last word “eyether,” which further irritated Shelly.
“I'll be the judge of that, Jade.”
The old lady stood, her poodles tumbling forgotten to the carpet. “Why don't you be a man for once, Richard? Don't buy the girl's affections. Be a man. Your brother, he's a man.”
Shelly saw her father's face go dead white, his lips thin to a grim line. “Robin died before he became a man, Jade,” he said.
“You're wrong, Richard.”
“Shelly,” her dad said, in his scary calm voice, “have you seen Carmen?”
“No.”
“She's in her house,” Jade said, settling back in her chair. “Feeding her husband. Come on, Mister Poo,” she said, her voice turning to a sugared coo as she patted her lap. “Come kiss Mama, Stinkums.”
The poodles jumped onto her lap and began licking her ugly red cheeks.
“Cody,” Rick said, “go on up to your room and get ready for bed.” Shelly thought he sounded really weird.
“But I didn't have dinner yet.”
“Then go up to your room and get ready for dinner,” he said in the quiet voice that meant trouble. “Now.”
Shelly nudged her brother, and he took off; he recognized the voice, too. The poodles yapped madly as he tore up the stairs.
“Shelly,” he said, ignoring Jade, “would you go out back and ask Carmen if she's cooking tonight? Tell her it's fine if she doesn't want to. We'll go out.”
“She already said she's cook—” She paused, realizing he was trying to get rid of her. “But I'll go make sure,” she finished quickly.
“Thanks, hon.”
She entered the hall, then moved into the shadows to listen.
“Jade,” her father said a moment later. “As I told you before, if you want to remain here, you will not question how I handle my children, nor will you insult any of us. But there's one more condition I forgot to mention earlier. You won't mention my brother again, in front of me or my children.”
“Too bad you're not more like your brother, Richard.”
“He's dead, Jade, so don't talk about him like he isn't. He's been dead for a long time.
“Only to you. But you wanted him dead, Richard. You were so jealous of him, so jealous of your poor little brother.”
Confused, Shelly listened closely. She knew her father had a brother—a twin, not a “little” brother—and that he'd died a long time ago, but that was all she knew. Dad didn't like to talk about him.
“The subject is closed,” her dad said.
Jade just giggled like an over-aged schoolgirl. “How I love him, his attentiveness, his charm. He's afraid of nothing. He's not like you at all, Richard. And you, you had the legs. What a waste. He should have had legs, and you should have been the freak.”
It was everything Shelly could do to not burst back in and ask what they were talking about.
“Be quiet, Jade.”
“You had legs, but you were so jealous of him,” Jade continued. “He tells me, you know. Him with his poor little body.” Her voice became dreamy. “Such nice, strong arms. And so much fun. His eyes glint with fun. He's not a poop, like you. He knows how to live. How to love a woman. He's a
real
man.”
“You whore,” he said in that same deadly quiet voice. “You slept with your own nephew, you filthy, fucking whore.”
Shelly, shocked, stepped backward and bumped into a dining chair. It crashed.
“Shelly!” Her father's voice was serious and stern.
“Yes, Daddy?” she peeped, scared to death. He never, never used words like that.
“Come here, please.”
She did, wondering what he was going to do. He sounded crazy-calm, like he did when he'd told her Mom had died.
She almost flinched when he put his hand on her shoulder. Behind her, she could feel Jade's eyes boring into her back. “Shelly, did you eavesdrop just now?”
“Yes.”
“I'm glad.”
“You're glad?”
“Because I have to tell you some things, and I've been putting it off. Now I have to tell you. Please go check with Carmen, then meet me upstairs, in the study.”
“Study?”
“The room with all the bookshelves.”
“Oh, yeah, right.”
This time she didn't wait to hear more.
BOOK: Bad Things
10.58Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Fear the Darkness by Mitchel Scanlon
The Purple Heart by Vincent Yee
Deadly Vision by Kris Norris
Los cuatro amores by C. S. Lewis
Come Gentle the Dawn by McKenna, Lindsay
Reel Murder by Mary Kennedy
Wild Card by Moira Rogers
Mama B - A Time to Dance (Book 2) by Stimpson, Michelle
Whispers from the Dead by Joan Lowery Nixon