A short story by Daniel A. Olivas
1.
“So
what?” says René. He adds a shrug for emphasis.
Silence. René
just stares at me. And then another: “So
what?” It’s not really a question. It’s a
statement. A declaration. A dare.
René wipes his nose using his torn
shirtsleeve. He gets most of the blood
and snots off his upper lip that had been seeping slowly from his
nostrils. René holds his arm in front of him and
examines the sleeve. His dark skin peeks
out from the torn blue cotton. He blinks
and then lets out a muffled laugh, as if he had just discovered five bucks in
his pocket.
I can’t stand seeing René’s eyes when he gets like this so
I turn and look over toward his apartment’s kitchen window which now has most
of its glass piled up in jagged shards inside the sink and a few pieces on the
floor. Big Man lays right there, on some
of the broken glass. He’s in a heap,
like he’s drunk or something. But he’s
not.
“So
what?” René says again.
He
follows my eyes over to Big Man.
“Fuck
that pendejo,” says René. “He tried to kill me, that fucker. You saw.”
“But…” I start to answer.
“But the fuck what?”
I look down at my feet, tired at
looking at Big Man, who really isn’t very big.
Maybe five-five, if that. Muy
flaco, también. Skin and bones.
“Never mind,” I say. “Forget about it.”
“Damn straight,” says René, victorious. “Damn straight.”
2.
René gave us all names. His own little group, his followers. Branded us like cows with stupid little names.
René named Humberto “Big Man.” Funny because he’s so small. René
made himself laugh with that one.
Big Man’s little sister Silvia is “Slinky”
because she’s kind of sexy in a weird way.
Goth. Pierced left eyebrow, left nostril
and left cheek. She gives René blow jobs but they don’t
fuck. René says he has too much respect for
Silvia to stick her. Even though he
doesn’t—or didn’t—think much of her brother.
Silvia turned fifteen last week.
Big Man and me and René
finish high school this year. Well, at
least, I will.
Anyway, René named me “Freddie Freeloader”
which I hate. Kind of a fucked up name, you know?
It’s just because of that time I bummed some mota off of René behind the dumpster at our high
school. It was this one hot day during
our Ancient Cultures class which we cut at least twice a week. Just that one time I didn’t have any weed on
me. But then, right there, after passing
over the joint real nice, he calls me Freddie Freeloader through tight lips,
trying to keep the smoke in his lungs, but then he starts to laugh and then he
chokes, tears running down his face, totally cracking himself up. After he calms down, René looks up at me and says, “You’re
Freddie Freeloader, Alfredo.” He adds: “From
now on.”
And it’s stuck with me for almost four
years. René isn’t called anything but his own
baptism name. Nobody dares call him
something else. Not me. Not nobody.
3.
Blue in green. Or is it green in blue? Anyway, that’s Sylvia’s eyes. They kind of glow with the two colors mixed
in. Because her skin is real dark and
her long hair shines black, Sylvia’s eyes are the first thing you notice about
her. They make her beautiful. At least, that’s what I think. But whenever I start daydreaming about those
eyes, that skin . . . my mind wanders to what I know she does to René and I feel sick. I don’t understand it. It’s fucked up. And it’s going to get more fucked up when
Sylvia finds out her brother’s dead.
4.
“All Blues.” That’s the name I’d give René if I could. He’d probably kick my ass if I tried so I
never even thought about saying it to
his face. He always wears this long
sleeved blue shirt tucked into blue Dickies, the real loose kind. René
even likes to put on these blue Chuck Taylor’s.
Maybe he’d laugh, take it in stride, not care if I called him All
Blues. But I doubt it. I mean, I try to act tough, but I’m nothing
like René. Look at Humberto. Dead.
In two seconds, before Humberto could even open the window and sneak in,
René
hears something, jumps up from the couch where we had been smoking and watching
some stupid shit on TV in the other room and he runs into the kitchen before I
know what’s happening. That’s the funny
thing about René:
he could be all fucked up on mota but he never gets fuzzy or out of
control. He stays alert, like a fox. Or a snake.
Or a rat.
Anyway before I even realize he’s
run out of the room, I hear a grunt and then all this glass breaking. I freak out at this point and get to the
kitchen as fast as I could, tripping over my untied shoes. And there I see Humberto on the floor, not
moving, with broken glass all the over place.
René was
hovering over the body, his shirt sleeve torn and bloody, looking up at me and
smiling.
5.
“Flamenco Sketches,” whispers
Sylvia. “That’s what I call them.”
She hands me one drawing, and then
another. I don’t know why Sylvia calls
her pictures Flamenco Sketches. I don’t
see any Spanish dancers. Just black circles,
going round and round and round from the outside edges to the center. But I don’t criticize her. I just look at each one and nod like I really
like the drawings. I don’t know why she
brought them here, of all places, but she has a right to do what she
wants. Especially right now.
The church is crowded, people are
crying, the priest is saying something over Humberto’s coffin, which is closed. His mom’s a mess, collapsed down into
herself, weeping but not making a sound except for a moan that scares me. Sylvia finally puts the drawings down on the
pew, leans her head into my shoulder, closes her eyes. I was surprised she wanted me to sit next to
her with the family, but René was nowhere to be found so I guess she needs
me. They don’t blame him, not really,
because I told everyone it was an accident.
I had to.
I look around, see all of these
people I’ve known since I was little.
And then I see him, René,
off at the side of the church, by the statue of Saint Thomas. You know, doubting Thomas, the one who didn’t
believe Jesus had come back from the dead.
And I blink, once, twice, and then he turns his head a little to stare
back at me. And then he does it. He smiles.
Just a little. With that look in
his eyes. And I swear he starts to laugh,
real quiet, but it’s still a laugh. I
turn away from René
and kiss the top of Sylvia’s head. Her
hair is so soft and smells good. “It’s
okay,” I whisper. “It’s okay.”
[“Kind
of Blue” is featured in The King
of Lighting Fixtures: Stories (University of Arizona Press), and was
inspired by the tracks of the great Miles Davis album of the same name.]
you've been able to great charcters in such a short stories. very genuine
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