Authors: J. Minter
“Ow!” Mickey leaped up. “Caselli!”
“Yeah?” Caselli came in.
“The bed doesn't work.”
“Sure it does.” Caselli climbed onto the now-still bed and lay there, with his arms folded over his stomach like a mummy in a casket. “See?”
“I get it,” Mickey nodded. “No sudden moves on the Inquisition-guest-bed.”
Caselli got off and worked the winch, and the bed slowly ascended toward the ceiling. He said, “If you were going to like, do something that involved pleasure, this would not be the bed to do it on.”
“That's fine,” Jonathan said. “It's not like I'd ever come back here and sleep on it drunk or anything.”
Jonathan and Mickey smiled at each other since it was a party week and that was obviously going to
happen. Caselli gave them a look. Mickey wandered toward the door.
“Where are you going?” Jonathan leaped up, as if suddenly afraid to be alone in the house.
“Um, the kitchen? You want anything?”
“Oh, okay, sure. I'll have whatever you're having.”
“Me and Philippa used to do tequila slammers in the kitchen after school⦔
“Dude, I'm sorry those days are over.”
“Stay here,” Mickey said. “Try to figure out how you're going to sleep in that bed.”
Mickey went to the kitchen and found a roast beef and some vegetables simmering on the stove. He put together a couple of plates and snagged some cans of Tecate from one of the refrigerators.
They were supposed to have Sunday dinner but when Mickey glanced up, it was already eight o'clock, so he guessed that maybe it wasn't happening. He padded slowly back to his room with the food.
When he got to his door, he heard voices and he stopped. He didn't have any kind of antenna for gossip, but something did feel off. Then he figured it out. It was his mom's perfumeâhe had no idea what it was called, it was just mom-smell to himâcoming from his room. She was in there with Jonathan. Mickey put his ear to the wall.
“You never saw me at your house. Do you understand that?” Lucy Pardo was saying.
“Okay,” Jonathan said.
“We are more than happy to provide for you here. We even built you this bed, but I need to be assured that the only place you know me from is this house, where I am Mickey's mom. Right?”
“Okay,” Jonathan repeated. Mickey looked at the floorboards for a moment and tried to figure out what was going on. Just as he got ready to go into his room and ask both of them exactly that, his mom came out.
“Hi, darling.” She walked past him quickly, only pausing to run a hand over his great mass of spiky hair, which he realized, in that moment, he only kept up because she liked it that way. Mickey went into his room and put the food down.
“Dude, what is the deal with you and my mom?”
Jonathan just shook his head. He seemed to be staring at a point on the ceiling. And when Mickey looked he saw that he was looking up at the bed.
“Man,” Jonathan said. “I am really afraid to sleep in that thing.”
Above them, the black-leather-covered bed swayed back and forth and the lengths of thick chain clanked together in a way that could only be described as
forbidding.
“Tell me the truth, Jonathan.”
“If I had a clue, I would.” Jonathan leaned against Mickey's desk. “I'm ditching school in the morning and going to Tootsi Plohound. I need a new pair of boots and I want to see if the new Prada flip-flops are cool or not. You want to come?”
“I wouldn't want to go shopping even if I did understand what you were talking about.” Mickey was chewing on the collar of his T-shirt, watching Jonathan.
“If my mom were doing something wrong, you'd tell me, wouldn't you?”
“Yeah.” But Jonathan looked away. He said, “I'm so tense lately I can't even go to the bathroom for real.”
“Well, I'll leave if you want to use mine.”
“No, it's not the same as using mine at home.”
“I know what you mean,” Mickey said. “You do look a little heavy, like with secrets and stuff, huh?”
“Mmm,” Jonathan said.
“Look dude, I'll make you a deal. You tell me what's going on before your mom gets back, okay? Before you leave here.”
“And what'll you do?”
“Well, I won't kill you. And the Caribbeanâ¦well, it's fine. I won't go. And if there's some other bullshit that's going on with you, I promise I won't get upset
about whatever it is.”
“Actually, that sounds pretty fair,” Jonathan said. And they sat down to eat.
Arno came out of school and Mickey was standing there waiting for him. It was Wednesday, lunchtime, and everyone was being let out of school early for homecoming and the Thanksgiving holiday. Arno had been through a rough couple of days. His mom and dad didn't appear to be speaking to each other, and Mickey's dad kept calling his house. Arno had no idea why. He wanted to ask Mickey, but he doubted Mickey would know anything about what his father was up to since he avoided his father as much as he possibly could.
Arno turned up his collar and stuffed his hands into his blazer pockets. He didn't have a schoolbag with him since he didn't have any plans to do any work over the break.
“They let you all out earlier than us?” Arno asked Mickey.
“No, I'm still supposed to be there. But they were going to do all that homecoming bullshit, so I cut out.”
Mickey shivered. He was in shorts, flip-flops and a white leather motorcycle jacket. The Gissing kids stared at him.
“Everything cool with Jonathan at your house?” Arno asked.
“YeahâI've barely seen him, actually. I know he went to school the last couple of days, and then he hung out at his house with that painter. We were supposed to meet up today, though.”
“What are we doing now?” Mickey asked.
“Don't we usually go to the movies?” Arno suggested.
It was true. In the past they'd cut out of homecoming activities and everything else and gone to whatever joke movie was playingâ
Old School
or
Riddick
or any of that other garbageâthe stupider the better. They always erred in favor of those in the group who couldn't possibly sit through a whole movie unless they were high.
“Yeah, I think
Fog of War
is playing. We can go as soon as Jonathan comes out,” Arno said, nodding at the main entrance to Gissing. “David's playing Potterton's student/alumni basketball game, right? What about Patch?”
“I heard that Patch went to school today.”
“Huh.”
“He
went
. He didn't
arrive
.”
“Right.” Arno checked his watch. It was a seventies Rolex he'd snagged from his dad, and it was so big it made his wrist look feminine. With his blazer, he wore a turtleneck and jeans. “Aren't you freezing?” Arno asked.
“Kind of. Why don't we go watch David play ball. I bet there'll be girls there.”
“Our exes?”
“Yeah, but more, besides.” The truth was Mickey wasn't really up for seeing other girls yet, but he knew exactly how to get Arno's attention.
“All right, cool. It'll be like⦠like scouting for Ginger Shulman's party later.” Arno smiled to himself at that thought.
“Hey man,” Mickey threw an arm around Jonathan as he came out of Gissing. “Let's get you over to Potterton to see some good basketball and bad women.”
“Okay, why not.” Jonathan said.
Mickey hailed a cab.
“I talked to Ruth,” Jonathan said. “She'll be at Ginger's but she can't see me till then. I can't believe I'm the only one of us with a girlfriend.”
“Yeah, that is weird.” Arno twisted the dial on his Rolex but the click-click-click sound faded away when
the cab took off across town.
Later, Arno called Patch, which felt particularly surreal since it happened so rarely. Neither of them were phone guys.
“It was cool. David got a triple double and stuffed on that kid Alex who's playing for Yale this year. Remember Alex? We hated that kid. And now David stuffed his ass.”
“Sounds cool,” Patch said.
“I'm home,” Arno said. “I'm just going to change and shit, before we head to Ginger Shulman's, which is at her parents' new apartment this year. I bet everybody'll be there. Definitely LieselâI told you I blew her off, right?”
“What's up?” Patch said. But Arno knew he wasn't talking to him. Patch liked to buy presents for his family for Thanksgiving rather than Christmas, so he was out shopping.
“Are you in SoHo?”
“I gotta go,” Patch said. “I see Selina Trieff, or I think I'm supposed to meet her, and she's here.”
“Dude, is she your girlfriend or isn't she?”
But Patch was already gone. Arno let himself into his house, which was bustling with strangers. There were always workmen in there, hanging art from the gallery
or taking it down, or there were cooks preparing food for a benefit or special event his parents were having in one of the common rooms.
“Hello there, boy,” his dad said. “Have you seen your mom?”
“No.”
Arno and his dad stared at each other. Where was Allie Wildenburger?
“Where have you been?”
“Um, me and the guys just saw a movie. And we're meeting up again in a couple of hours.”
Mr. Wildenburger's nose was twitching like a rabbit's, and the foxes on his velvet loafers seemed to be baring their teeth at Arno.
“Ask around for your mother, would you? For me? I'm off.”
“To where?”
“Paris.”
“But Dad, tomorrow's Thanksgiving!”
“It's also the day your friend Jonathan's father's getting married, and that's more important.”
“You're his best man, yeah? Didn't you say that earlier?”
“Now I'm his worst man. I've got to get there and serve him papers before his new wife can lay claim to his money. Oh waitâ”
“What?”
“You're not supposed to know any of this. You're totally confused, aren't you? Save me some turkey. I'll see you on the weekend.” And with that, Mr. Wildenburger strode out of the living room.
Arno landed with a thump on the couch and wondered if this had something to do with why Jonathan had been so weird lately. But wasn't the new wife rich? What about that huge yacht and the sailing trip?
“One other thing.” Arno's dad poked his head back in. “Tell your mother that if I find out she's been spending time with Ricardo Pardo, I'm going to murder them both.”
“I don't know what you're talking about,” Arno spoke plaintively. He couldn't figure out what Mickey's dad had to do with anything.
“Right. You shouldn't know any of this. Forget I said anything. Sorry.” And Arno's dad was gone.
David and Patch walked through Times Square. Patch preferred to walk everywhere if he could. Even though the wind was whipping their butts and it was dark and cold, Patch was in sandals, paper-thin khakis, and a torn white-linen blazer over an ancient pink oxford shirt. David, for what might have been the first time in his life, asked himself a fashion question: Was dressing with a screw-you attitude toward the weather the cool thing to do? And if so, why?
David wrapped himself tighter in the black North Face down coat his parents had bought him the weekend before.
“You know, we never hang out together alone,” Patch said. They were wandering slowly up to Ginger Shulman's party at One Columbus Circle.
“Well, we're ⦔ But David trailed off. He wanted to say they were about as different as two people could be, but he couldn't find the right words. Instead he said, “Do you think Selina will be there?”
Patch was quiet for a moment. Then he said, “You know, I hadn't really thought about it. I like her though, I think.”
“Well, have you called her?”
“No, but we saw each other yesterday. I think we might've talked about being in love.”
“You can't remember?”
“Nah.” Patch looked away from David.
They kept going. David's phone vibrated against his chest. Amanda. He took the call.
“Are you going to be at the party?” she asked.
“Well, yeah. I was planning on it. Why?”
“Because then I can't go. I don't want to see you.”
“Oh come on Amandaâdon't be like that.”
Right then, Patch tapped David on the arm. He gestured for the phone. David gave it to him.
“Hey Amanda, this is Patchâ¦Yeah, I knowâwe've definitely never spoken on the phone before. Anyway, it'd be great if you came to the party tonight. I don't feel like I've seen you in weeks. And I'd love to be with you and David, because the two of you together are so great. So you'll come? Good. See you there.” Patch handed the phone back to David.
For a minute, David was too shocked to say anything. Then he said, “Wow. First you drive, now you fix things.”
“I know one problem we need to fix, and that's whatever's going on with Jonathan.”
“Yeah, I think you're right about that.”
“My little sisterâshe cares about him and she said he's all messed up. She said we're his best friends, so we've got to be there for him.”
David smiled. He thought,
if only Patch were just around more, we'd all be less screwed up
. But of course the problem was just that, Patch was never around. Then they both glanced up at a forty-foot-tall photo of a lingerie model they knew from kindergarten, and David managed to grab Patch just before he stepped into traffic and disappeared for good.
“Even if you totally screw it up it's still tequila and ginger ale, and that's pretty good,” Liesel yelled.