The
girl was the only bright object there, behind the infants' wear shop on
College Street. A small plot of fenced city yard, grass struggling in
an hostile soil. The fence, never painted, appeared skeletal, was
ringed with discarded household effects; rusting relics that once had a
use and no one had bothered putting out to the trash. And tires,
hubcaps, a jack, broken. They might have been holding up the fence.
She
lay on a sun-cot, bikinied, sunglassed, absorbing the sun. Movie and
fashion magazines on the ground beside her flapped open in the light
breeze. It was hot. She turned to bake on her back for a while, lay
with her head cradled in her arms, thinking, thinking of nothing. Her
hair, long and slightly curled, curtained her face. It was a pretty,
petulant face, framed with filaments of honey. The onlooker, had there
been one, would see her face again as she turned over once more,
adjusted the cot to a semi-reclining position, tugged at the stubborn
ratchet, then sat up.
She lifted her hair away from her
perspiring neck and felt immediate cooling relief, then was hot again as
she let her hair fall once more around her shoulders. Reaching under the
cot, she pulled up a bag, took out a bottle of nail polish, let the bag
fall. Her teeth pulled in her bottom lip as she concentrated on drawing
the brush evenly over her nails. A garish purple that appealed to her,
looked good, she thought, with her tan. She paused in the act of
turning another nail into a perfectly oval grape. What would she wear
tonight? If it was cool enough she could wear her white turtleneck;
look good with her darkened skin.
A fly buzzed annoyingly, big
and black; kept landing on her. She slapped at it, kept missing.
Goddamn! The nail polish was dropped back into the bag, she wafted her
hands around, drying the nails. Tentatively touched one; it was dry.
Withdrew a bottle of sun-tan lotion out of the bag, began to grease it
over herself again, being careful not to get any of it in her hair.
Wouldn't have time to wash it tonight. Wish she could have a cigarette.
They were there, in the bag, but if her Ma saw, she'd have a bloody
fit.
Think of the old bag and there she is, leaning out the
upstairs window, shouting 'Sheila!'. Sheila didn't bother to lift her
head, made as though she'd heard nothing. Without looking, she knew how
her mother would look. Face red, angry. Mouth open in a loud black
whine. 'SHEILA!' The girl settled, squirmed back down on the cot,
lifted her face to the sun, eyes closed.
"SHEILA! You get up here right now! You heard me!"
Sheila
grimaced, lifted delicate fingers to her sunglasses, pushed them up
slightly, innocently looked to her mother. "You want me? You calling
me?"
"Get up here!"
Bitch! Stupid old bitch she is, the girl thought, looking now at the empty window, the blind grey with dirt, hanging crookedly.
The
cot was hers, she'd bought it with her own money; damned if she'd let
it sit there so Eddie or Mona could use it. Folded it, took it into the
back room behind the store, then went outside again to climb the back
stairs to the apartment.
The hall stank with stale cooking
odours. The walls, an indeterminate non-colour, frosted with years of
handprints, closed in on her. Better not touch them; she could feel
herself shrink, repelled; and to think she had, years ago. Filthy mess,
like the rest of the place.
It was cool going up the stairs, her bare skin pimpled.
The
door opened into the kitchen; the linoleum greasy with spilled suds
from the wringer-washer. Her mother, hair-bunned and grim, feeding a
sodden mess through the wringer, dripping on the floor.
"Who do you think you are anyway? Laying out there like that! You'd never think to help me, eh?"
"I did the dishes this morning, didn't I?" What the hell!
"I did the dishes this morning", her mother mimicked.
Ugly
old bitch, Boobs hanging, stomach sagging. Could even see it through
that old rag she's wearing. You'd think she'd be smart enough to colour
her hair, not leave it like that.
"There's other things ...
there's always other things", her mother raged now, angry with her
daughter's face. Deliberately blank. Her mother called her arrogant.
Well, maybe she was - tough shit!
"I never sat around like that - when I was a girl I helped my mother!"
You never were a girl, old bag. And no one, no one could help you! Biting her tongue, wanting to say it.
"Yeah, well, what'd you want me to to do? I'll go change now."
"I'll
change now - the lady! Sure you'll change! You're going to serve in
the store like that? Looking like a tramp?" Fuck you, ma.
"Where's Mona?"
"Never mind where's Mona! She does plenty - more than you. You get going now!"
Down the hall to her room. Hers and Mona's. Her mother's voice following all the way. Who the hell gives a damn what she says? STIFLE! Yelling about her friends. Says who, she can't go out tonight?
One
side of the room neat, the other like the rest of the apartment. It
wasn't that she didn't appreciate neatness, cleanliness - she did. But
why bother in this dump? Her kid sister could go on dreaming, thinking
that by keeping her things neat it would make a difference. Well, it
didn't, nothing did.
Suddenly her sister's attempts to cope
infuriated her. She walked over to the unpainted chest, pulled the top
drawer open, looked at the neat piles of faded clothing, pulled them
half out, rumpled them. Left them hanging half out of the drawers. The
slippers and extra pair of shoes timidly pointing their toes under her
sister's half of the bed struck her as assertive. She kicked them
under. Pulled the spread cunningly tucked under the pillows to hide the
most worn portion, half off the bed.
Why the hell her go downstairs? Always her!
Sheila
pulled off her bathing suit, let the pieces drop to the floor and
kicked them aside. For a few minutes, she stood naked, admiring herself
in the mirror, craning to see all of herself. A big contrast between
her natural skin tone and the tan. Too bad she had to wear anything at
all. She turned, admired her rear, wiggled, tossed her hair. That's
what she looked like. She'd kill herself before she'd look like Ma.
Footsteps coming down the hall - she pulled on a pair of jeans, grabbed a tee shirt.
"What's taking
you?" Standing there, hands on hips. "You don't think you're going to
wear that outfit downstairs ... get some decent clothes on you."
"Ma ... I need a few dollars ... for when school starts. I need to get some stuff."
"What
stuff? I just gave you ten dollars. Didn't I? Her mother raised a
suds-lathered arm to push the straggling hair out of her eyes.
"Yeah,
yeah you did, but that was last week. I had to get bus tickets, went
to a movie. There was a few things I needed - it's gone."
"Gone! Go to work for more if you want it!"
"Okay! Okay, I'll quit school then. I don't mind going to work!"
"You
don't, eh? You're only fifteen. Think you're so damn big, don't you?
But I don't care, it's your father wants you to finish secretarial."
"Ma, I NEED the money!"
"How much? Never mind, I don't care how much. Five dollars is all you're getting. Hear?"
Back
down the hall, footsteps shaking the wall. The smell of the wash, sour
and grey, made her feel like throwing up. Good thing she didn't notice
the mess on Mona's side. The kid'll go whining to her later, though,
when she finds out.
Into the living room. Her mother's purse on
the couch. She picked it up, flicked on the television set, the sound
turned off. She stood absently for a moment, fascinated by the interior
of a palatial home, its inhabitants acting out some peculiar sequence, a
man and a woman, gesticulating, soundless, funny. Clicked open the
purse, pulling out the small change purse. Fifteen dollars and
sixty-five cents. She took fifty cents and a five-dollar bill. Changed
her mind, thought a minute, and took a ten, put the five back.
Out
through the room, then turned back to shut off the TV. Passing her
mother's commitment to gentility, the lovingly polished surfaces of the
dearly acquired dining room suite, where no one had ever eaten. Cherry
stain. Not bad. She dug into her back pocket for her key and
experimented. Running it over lightly, raised a skinny ribbon of wax.
Didn't the old lady ever hear of wax buildup ... it was on TV all the
time? Digging it in, she drew her breath. A scratch, white. Ruining
the surface of the table. She quickly drew several others, a pattern of
X's. Listened to hear if her mother was coming.
In the kitchen,
moving sideways to pass her mother carrying a basin of steaming clothes
to the porch to hang on the line. "Hurry up!" Grunting with the
weight of the wet clothes.
"And if you think", her mother's voice
shrilled down the stairs after her "that you're going to see that
motorcycle bum again, forget it!"
In the store, her father,
skinny and drawn-looking, glanced up from a customer. When the store
was empty he called her over to him.
"About time!"
"Yeah. Ma only just told me."
"I told you yesterday I had an appointment at the hospital. Said be down by two. What were you doing, so busy?"
She
stared at him, the deep ditches in his cheeks, hanging. Voice
querulous. She recalled vaguely how, long ago, he'd laughed sometimes.
"Oh yeah, well I thought maybe Eddie would come in."
"Don't think, Sheila! Do like you're told, eh? Learn to do what you're told! Now c'mere."
"Yeah?"
"Christ! Don't you learn how to speak proper English at that school? You forget over the summer? Yes! It's yes, not yeah!"
"Yeah, sure."
"Look,
unwrap this new shipment of layettes. Put them out on the shelf.
Neat, eh? Don't make a mess of it. I'm going to the bank when I get
back, then you can go."
"Okay."
"That's all you got to say to me?"
"?"
"I'm going to the hospital for tests - it's serious. I might have cancer - don't you care?"
"Well yeah, sure! Sure I do."
"How's about a kiss for your poor old Dad?"
A kiss. Yeah, sure.
"Can you spare a few bucks for me? I mean, I have some expenses to cover, what with school and all ..."
"Speak to your mother."
"But ... I ..."
"You know you're not supposed to come to me for money, Sheila. Speak to Ma, she looks after things like that."
She
watched him count the money in the till, slip the bundle under the coin
container, slam the cash register shut. He looked around the store,
mentally ticking things off; satisfied. Outside, she watched his head
bob up and down, walking past the window, out of sight.
She began
unpacking, stopped to help a customer. Disposable diapers. Then a
lady came in to buy some bibs, a diaper set. "Do you wrap?"
"Huh?"
"Do
you gift-wrap; this is a gift for my niece," the woman explained, the
sharp-nosed face scrutinizing her. She made Sheila feel stupid. Sheila
assumed what she felt was a superior air and loftily said, "No, we
don't bother. Usually too busy to do that kind of thing." Snappily
too, she said it. No time to do 'that kind of thing'; beneath her. Wrap
your own crap, lady.
She thought the woman would leave the
stuff, walk out, but she paid for everything and didn't even notice
she'd been short-changed fifty cents; too busy looking at Sheila.
Let
her look, I could be in the movies; probably wishes her daughter looked
as good. Let her look, she'll recognize me when she sees me on TV some
day.
The store empty, Sheila began rummaging around, looking for
tissue paper. She assembled a fair bundle, was satisfied with her
efforts, glanced at the disarray on the shelves, outfits haphazardly
lying one atop the other, the carefully interleaved tissue paper, smooth
and opaque, no longer separating them.
A woman huge with her
pregnancy wobbled in, interrupting the speculative thrust of her mind.
Sheila turned a warm smile on the woman. Wow! Any day now. She should
stay at home so no one'd have to look at her grossness.
"How much is the christening gown?"
"Christening gown?"
"In
the window." Sheila turned to look in the direction of the pointing
finger. No price on it, not for sale. Her mother's showpiece window
dressing.
"Ten bu ... dollars."
"I'll take it!" The
woman, her face padded with a triumphant flush, beaming. A real
bargain. If she only knew. And Sheila almost told her, wanting to
share the joke with someone, anyone; suppressed a giggle.
When
the woman walked out clutching the box, Sheila locked the door, pulled
the blind. Emptied the till into her bag. A lousy forty-five dollars.
Sixty with the sales she'd made. Seventy counting the money she'd taken
from her mother.
Going out to the back room hanging over the
yard, she locked that door, crumpled tissue paper around the wooden
floor, led a trail into the store. The paper caught well, a busy
crackling sound, spreading nicely, caressing the cardboard boxes piled
in neat rows along the back wall.
She walked back into the store,
her feet tingling, feeling as though she were stepping on pins; yet
pleasurable, the sensation. She stood there, watching the flames reach,
following her it almost seemed, like an obedient pet, reaching
tentatively at first into the store, then bolder, seeing her maternal,
her prideful look of approval; pet fire ventured closer, finally made
its crackling progression into the store.
Sheila jammed a chair
against the knob of the door at the back-stairs, leading up to the
apartment. Time for Ma's afternoon nap. Beauty sleep. She felt
light-headed, giggly, like the first time she'd been humped.
She
stood for another moment, mesmerized by the flames; beautiful, hungry
pet; nicer colours than a kitten, a canary. The flames, red, blue and
hungry, spread to the cartons flanking the walls, licked the counters.
Slow to catch, the wood, but getting started, getting into the swing of
things; like her at first, slow to like it, but learning fast.
Sheila let herself out the front door, locked it with the key from the till. LOVELY
day! The sun still bright, washing the sidewalk with a golden glow.
Heat inside, heat outside. College Street looks fine on a day like
this. And there's the whole day ahead of her.
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