called and cancelled that order. Iâm sorry â weâll take a drive to San Antone, I need some more ginseng anyway.â
âWell, oh my.â
âBut, you ordered almond-on-almond, didnât you?â asks George. âLook, theyâre unloading a new almond Special Edition side-by-side into Nancieâs!â
âWhat a day,â says Leona. Her face goes blank trying to suck back the fourth brag. Too late now, honey chile.
My eyes trudge over the breakfast bar, past the power bill you can see tucked behind the cookie jar, and into the living room, grasping at any straw of human dignity. Then Brad walks in, wearing a brand-new pair of Timberlands. Fucken âBang!â goes the door. He hoists his nose and heads straight for the TV. Heâll go sit on the rug and lip-read the beeps on the
Springer
show, I guarantee it.
My face caves in. This is how Iâm being grown up, this is my fucken struggle for learnings and glory. A gumbo of lies, cellulite, and fucken âWuvâ.
I turn to go to my room, but Lally grabs my head. He makes like heâs mussing my hair, but heâs actually holding me back. âLittle big man â letâs go share some thoughts.â
âWell sure,â says Mom, âyou retire for menâs business â Iâll fix a brew and fill the gals in on a certain somebodyâs diet.â
âWhat,â asks Leona, âshe went back to
Weight Watchers
?â
âThe
Zone
,â says Mom.
Iâm tuned out by the time Lally nudges me to the dark end of the living room. I get sat at Pamâs end of the sofa, the end closest to the floor. He spreads himself at the high end, and studies my shoes with a frown.
âTch, I canât tell you what youâve put your mother through. Can you imagine if I hadnât been around to pick up the pieces?â
Is he fucken kidding or what? Heâs been here seven days, and now heâs like my fucken blood? I just stare at the rug. A fucken yard of it dies.
âTo say weâre challenged, Vern, is to put it very mildly.â
I climb off the sofa. âTheyâre your damn pieces.â
âWhat was that?â He grabs my arm.
âFuck
off
,â I say.
He slaps me with the flat of his hand. âFuckin cuss at me.â
The noise draws Brad over, shuffling on his ass. Lally tightens his grip on my arm.
âLalito, how do you want your coffee?â calls Mom.
âHot and sweet, like my woman.â Lally flashes Brad a smile, and winks. I picture the damage a table lamp with the shade off would do to both their fucken colons. Lally pulls me close and starts to speak softly. âI hear talk of a firearm. You hear about another firearm?â
I just stay quiet.
He watches me for a moment, then hoists his eyebrows high. âRemind me to call Dr Goosens.â He waits for a reaction, but I stay impassive. He waits a little longer, then settles back into the sofa and starts to scratch out the Dallas Cowboys label my dad sowed into the arm. âItâs not too late to shift the paradigm, Vern. In fact, if the paradigm doesnât shift, the story will die. Nobody wins if the story dies. Iâm waiting to hear if Iâve been commissioned for a whole series, in depth. Could cross over into feature rights, web events. We could turn your situation around three hundred and sixty degrees . . .â
âLearn some fucken math.â
âWell look!â Mom walks in with the coffee. âHeâs only twelve and he has a hundred million dollars! An e-mailionaire, look guys!â
Itâs
Americaâs Youngest Millionaires
on TV. The ladies drift over like farts.
âSmall fry,â says Brad. âMy first billionâs in the bag.â
âAttaboy, Bradley!â says George.
Eyes move to the screen like sinners to fucken church. âA
millionaire
before he was
ten
,â says the reporter, âRicky is now well on
Robert Rankin
Brenda Hampton
Delilah Devlin
Robyn Donald
Diana Pharaoh Francis
Listening Woman [txt]
Richard Preston
Luanne Rice
Marie Lu
Marg McAlister