A short story by Daniel A. Olivas
Wilfredo
likes to dress to get Papá all riled up.
You know, Willie wears those short-shorts that you see on the ladies who
walk up and down that bad street near the Shell Station that Mamá says no
self-respecting good Catholic would wander by unless your car died and you
needed to get some help from Manny who works there. Mamá says those putas have no right to mess up our nice neighborhood. But the neighborhood don’t look so nice and I
figure some pretty ladies walking up and down a street can only make things
look nice, right?
So, Willie
likes to put on these short-shorts that are so tiny that his nalgas are hanging out and then he
pops in these blue contacts so that his eyes look like he’s out of some scary
space movie where only one person knows that the aliens are taking over
people’s bodies and no one, not even your father, believes you when you say
they’re going to take us over, too. I
hate those movies. They make my stomach
hurt.
Anyway,
today Willie comes down the stairs looking so pretty with his long legs showing
and his eyes not looking scary this time for some reason but shining a blue
that looks like Uncle Chucho’s restored Mustang instead of a space alien’s
eyes. And I think to myself that
Willie’s cheeks even look special, kind of red like a flower, like the blush
Mamá finally let me buy from Sav-On even though I’m only twelve but she says, mija, you’re a good girl so it’s
okay. I think Willie likes to take a
little of my blush every so often because I see big fingerprints in it that are
bigger than mine but that’s okay because I think he looks prettier than me
anyway so he should use it. So, this
morning here comes Willie looking really extra pretty and Papá is reading La Opinión at the breakfast table,
drinking his hot, black coffee after finishing a nice, big bowl of menudo which is his special treat on
Sunday mornings.
Willie
sits down at the table without saying nothing.
Mamá is busy at the stove, cleaning something up, I don’t know
what. I’m on the floor watching the Power Puff Girls video on the small TV that
sits on the kitchen counter near all the Coke cans for recycling. I look up and smile at Willie. Willie reaches across the table and grabs a
piece of pan dulce and these
little gold chains that hang from his wrist just jingle-jangle and they remind me
of Christmas which is a mile away.
Willie gives me a wink and I smile and look at Papá who is now looking
up at Willie but Papá isn’t smiling and so my smile falls from my face like a
dirty sock. I don’t like Papá’s eyes
right now. They’re all squinted-up and
his big, black eyebrows come down in a mean “V” and he puts his coffee cup down
on the green place mat and some of it spills over the sides of the cup but Papá
doesn’t seem to care.
Finally, Papá says, ¿Qué es esto?
What’s what? Willie says through a
mouthful of pan dulce.
I
turn to look at my video again but not for long. Mamá screams and my head swivels like a chair
and I see Papá holding Willie against the wall and something doesn’t look right
because Willie is looking down at Papá even though Willie is shorter by about
six inches and then I see that Willie’s feet aren’t touching the floor no more,
they’re just dangling there like a doll’s feet and I notice for the first time
that he’s wearing these pretty, clear-plastic chanclas. And I don’t know what to do so I just sit
there with tears coming down my face like someone just turned on the backyard
hose and Mamá isn’t moving, too, but now she isn’t screaming, just standing in
the kitchen, hands pulling at the dishrag, mouth open like an empty can of tuna
and eyes owl-wide.
And
Papá starts to yell something in Spanish so fast I don’t know what he’s
saying. And then I see Willie’s pretty,
fake blue eyes flicker towards me. And
he smiles. Not a big smile. Just enough so that I know he’s smiling at
me. And suddenly my tears turn off. Just like that. And the house seems so quiet now, like we’re
suddenly under water, but I see Papá’s lips moving fast like a cat. And Willie just hangs there against the wall,
smiling at me. Looking pretty.
[“Willie” is featured in the
short-story collection, Devil
Talk (Bilingual Press)].
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