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Authors: Pete Hautman

Tags: #Hautman, #Crime

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BOOK: The Mortal Nuts
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She was always surprised by his size. The Axel in her memory was a medium-size old man. The Axel of the present stood three inches over six feet. She could see way up into his nostrils. And she always forgot his freckles. He had freckles like a little kid; when he grinned he sometimes looked like a balding, wrinkled, green-eyed, oversize eight- year-old.

“Well, here I am,” she said, staring up at the mole on his eyelid.

Axel frowned. “You smell like liquor.”

Carmen shrugged and set her bag on the floor between them. “I get tense. I hate airplanes, you know? Besides, don't I deserve a drink to celebrate my first year of school?”

“You're too young to drink hard liquor.”

“I'm twenty-one now, Axel.”

“Too young,” he repeated stubbornly. If he had his way, the legal age for drinking would be forty-five.

Carmen changed the subject. “So how are you doing? How's your blood pressure?”

“All over hell. Goddamn doctor has me eating stuff you couldn't give away in Ethiopia. A guy can't live on leaves and roots, you know?” He looked at her uniform, pointed a big, speckled hand at her chest. “They let you wear that now?”

“I wore it for you. How's Sophie? How's the Taco Shop? How are the chips this year? Are they rancid again? I don't want to be serving rancid nachos this year. Come on.” She moved off down the concourse. “I got a suitcase at the baggage claim.”

Axel watched her move away in the white dress—wrinkled and slightly damp now from the long flight, sticking a little to the back of her thighs. He could tell by her walk, as if the floor was covered with foam rubber, that she'd had more than a couple of drinks. He picked up her bag and followed.

“That goddamn Helmut tried to give me that same shit all over again,” he said. “Rancho Rauncho or whatever it is all over again, and you know they smelled the same as last year? I think he must make them in his basement, probably changes his oil about once a year. Teach me to buy Mexican from a Norwegian. I told him a guy ought to make chips a guy would want to eat. Told him to cornhole his corn chips. I'm buying from the Garcias this year.”

Carmen laughed. “Good for you. Did you really say that to him? Was Sophie there? You telling Helmut to shove his corn chips. I bet she about shit.”

“Where do you learn to talk like that?”

“From you,” she said over her shoulder.

Axel muttered to himself as he followed Carmen toward the baggage claim, his eyes moving from her white shoes to her white cotton dress and back again. He hated it when she teased him. But he liked the uniform a lot. She looked good in it. He liked the idea of her flying in to help him. And this year he would make sure his nachos were the best. Twenty- five years in the business, he had learned you do not cut corners on product quality. People come back a year later and tell you you got shitty chips, you better have an answer for them.

It took forever for Carmen's bags to arrive. Axel tried to ask her about school, but Carmen's bubbly energy seemed to have deserted her. She replied in monosyllables, yawning repeatedly. After a few minutes, she sat down on a bench and stared at the baggage carousel, her eyelids almost closed, until her bag arrived.

On the way out to the parking lot, Axel carrying both her suitcase and her overnight bag, she stumbled twice, nearly falling.

“Are you okay?” he asked.

Carmen smiled dreamily and nodded. “Just a little tired,” she explained. She didn't seem to notice that Axel had a new truck. She got in it the same way she would have climbed in his old one, didn't look around it or ask him anything, just planted her ass on the seat and waited for him to drive. He was disappointed. He had hoped to impress her with his new wheels, hoped to show her he wasn't such an old fogy after all. Wow her with the AM/FM radio and the sport wheels and the lariat stripes.

He had to laugh at himself. What difference did it make what she thought? She was just a kid. He wished she wouldn't drink so much. A girl shouldn't grow up so fast. He pulled out onto the freeway and brought the F-150 up to fifty miles per hour. He wanted to turn on the radio, show her how you could turn a knob and make the sound go from one speaker to another, something he'd figured out on the way over, but when he turned his head to say something she was slumped against the door, her mouth open, snoring. She looked young, her face smooth and childlike. He remembered the day she had come to work for him—a bright-eyed, elfin high schooler overflowing with girl energy. That was five years ago, but he remembered it like yesterday.

It had been a few days before the fair. He'd been scrambling to get the restaurant ready, trying to get a crew lined up, interviewing the kids sent over by the State Fair Employment Office. He always asked them to send him all the Mexican girls, because it gave his taco stand that authentic south-of-the-border look. The employment people always gave him a bunch of shit about equal opportunity. Most years he ended up with a stand full of tall, blond, blue-eyed boys and girls.

The day he met Carmen he had been down under the counter, scraping up some congealed grease from the previous year, when he heard a voice say, “Hey, anybody named Axel in there?”

He stood up, to discover a dark-haired girl chewing gum and smoking a cigarette, shoving her burgeoning breasts up against the edge of the counter. “You Axel?” she asked.

Axel watched her blow a bubble.

“That's right. Who are you?”

The bubble popped, leaving a tiny cloud of cigarette smoke floating in front of her face. She grinned and said, “My name's Carmen. I think you're supposed to give me a job or something. How much money will I make?”

It had taken him all of five seconds to fall for her. She wasn't Mexican, but he hired her anyway.

Two days later, when he caught her pocketing a five-dollar bill, he did not love her less, though he watched her more carefully. And now? He had to be honest with himself. She wasn't a girl anymore. She was a full-blown woman, practically bursting out of her nurse's uniform, reeking of alcohol and cigarettes, snoring. Still, a wave of tenderness passed over him. She was someone he could nurture and protect, someone with whom he could share his seven decades of wisdom and experience. Like a daughter. Although it was hard not to stare at her tits sometimes.

He wished she could be trusted. He was still waiting for her grasping, childlike impulsiveness to mellow into responsibility. Maybe someday she would appreciate all he had done for her, maybe take care of him when he got old. That felt good. He liked thinking of her as a nurse, pressing a cool hand to his forehead.

The blast of a horn sent Axel back into his lane. Some kid in a Chevy, asshole kid driving too fast, swerved around him. Axel gripped the wheel and focused on his driving, his heart hammering. He wasn't used to this new truck. All the dials were in the wrong places. The steering wheel felt stiff, and you had to put on the seat belt or it would beep and flash at you. And the engine: he'd taken one look at it and closed the hood—you had to have a goddamn computer to change the spark plugs. At least Sam had taken care of the air bag situation. He drove, listening to Carmen's snores, happy not to have to worry about the thing blowing up in his face.

Chapter 6

Mickey Dean, dressed in her Go Big Red gym shorts and tank top, sat curled up on the upholstered rocker, reading a book, holding it between her bony knees. She didn't look up when her little brother clomped into the apartment, dragging the toes of his big black boots as he crossed the room. Her cat, Isabella, tensed up, a ridge of fur rising on her back. James shrugged out of his jacket, let it fall to the floor, and walked past Mickey into the kitchenette. She saw fingernail scratches on his back. She thought she knew whose. The cat fled into Mickey's bedroom.

Mickey heard the sound of a pop top.

“That better not be the last one,” she shouted.

James shuffled back into the living room, holding a Pepsi.

“If that's the last one, you better go out and buy some more.” Mickey glared at him, her oversize red-plastic- rimmed eyeglasses pushed up on top of her brittle blond hair. She was a big girl, nearly six feet tall, hard and lean, elbows and knees and shoulders sticking out everywhere, weak blue eyes, small mouth, and a beak like a roadrunner. She and her brother looked as unlike as any two people on the planet. Even their skin color. Hers was pale, while James's skin had a dusky, almost khaki tint. Different fathers. Possibly different mothers as well—the Dean family history was somewhat muddled. Sandra Dean, their mother, looked like a seriously obese Barbra Streisand.

All Mickey knew for sure was that she'd grown up with James in the same miserable Council Bluffs rambler, watching Sandra drink herself unconscious daily. Mickey hadn't been back, hadn't seen her mom in six years, not since she took off on her seventeenth birthday and got herself a job printing T-shirts, a job she still held. A year after Mickey left home, her brother James had dropped out of school and quickly established himself in the Omaha-Council Bluffs drug trade, selling weed and acid and a few other items to former classmates. He'd lasted about five weeks before landing in the youth rehab center at Geneva, Nebraska, for six months. When he got out, Mickey found him a job with the T-shirt company, working in the warehouse. That had lasted a few months, until the warehouse manager found James asleep, again, on a stack of red 50/50 XXL raglan- sleeve sweats. James had disappeared from her life for more than a year after that. The next time she heard from him he was in jail, about to be sentenced for trying to sell three ounces of North Platte Green to an Omaha narcotics officer. That time he was nineteen, an adult, and they'd sent him to the state penitentiary in Lincoln. Mickey had approved of the sentence. Maybe that would be what it took to open his eyes.

For the past several weeks, since James had been released from Lincoln, he'd been staying with her. Sleeping on her couch. Eating her food. Being mean to her cat. Leaving the toilet seat up.

He had definitely changed. For one thing, he was shaving his head nearly every day now, leaving little hairs all over her bathroom. He had those gold rings in his eyebrow. Something else had changed too. James had never been a particularly caring or empathic young man, but after thirty months in Lincoln he didn't seem to give a shit about anything. He especially did not give a shit about his big sister, who happened to be supporting him.

Mickey said, “You're a parasite, James, you know that?”

He dropped onto the cat-shredded couch, put his boots up on the coffee table.

“You look for a job today?” she asked, staring at his boots.

“Sure. I looked all day long.”

“You can't stay here forever, you know. I said you could stay for a few weeks, just till you got a job.”

James Dean shrugged. “What you reading?” he asked. He tipped back the Pepsi and let a quarter ounce of cola slip into his mouth, held it there, enjoying the sensation of bubbles on his tongue.

Mickey held up the book, one of her poetry books, a big fat brown one. He leaned toward her and read the title:
The Complete Prose and Poetry of John Donne
.

“Read me something,” he said. Mickey liked to think she was the smart one. It calmed her down when she could show off her education, act like she knew everything.

“Are you going to go look for work tomorrow?”

“Absolutely. C'mon, Mick. Read me something. Maybe it'll make me a better person.”

Mickey frowned, trying to stay mad. Dean turned his mouth into a smile, giving her his cute big-eyed little brother look. It got her every time. She flipped through the book, looking for something. She cleared her throat and lowered her chin, just like when they were little kids and she would read to him.


Any man's death diminishes me
,” she read, “
because I am involved in mankind.

Dean interrupted. “What's that supposed to mean?” He liked to ask her what poems and things meant, see what kind of bullshit she could come up with.

“That means that we are all brothers. And sisters.”

“I met a lot of guys in Lincoln weren't my brothers,” Dean said.

“You just don't get it.”

“Sure I do. Let me see that.” He grabbed the book. “Show me where you were.”

Mickey pointed at a highlighted paragraph. Dean furrowed his brow and read. “The guy can't spell for shit,” he said. “
No man is an Iland
. No s. That's not how you spell it.”

“You are so ignorant. That's the original spelling, the way they used to write.”

“What he's saying,” Dean said, reading further, “is that you are a part of me.”

Mickey hesitated, then nodded uncertainly.

He was getting it now. “So I can do whatever I want with you. Like you are a hair on my head.”

She shook her head. “No, no, no,” she said. “You're missing the point, as usual.”

Dean said, “Oh, I got the point, all right. The man's saying what I knew all along. You are just a part of me. I pull the string, you jerk.” He faked a punch at Mickey's face; she jerked her head back.

“See? You're a part of me.”

Mickey stood up. “You're worse than ignorant. You're ignorant and stupid on top of it.” She snatched the book and went into the bathroom. Dean heard the toilet seat bang down.

Dean stared at the closed door, the word stupid stuck in his ears. He was not stupid. He was right. What the guy John Donne was saying was something Dean had only recently come to suspect: that the world and all things in it were simply extensions of himself. He thought about Carmen. Was she part of him too? He thought about her laughing, drunk and loose, letting him smother himself in her soft flesh. How many nights in Lincoln had he laid in his bunk dreaming of exactly that? He'd been thinking about Carmen a lot lately. Maybe Mickey was right. Maybe it was time to move out. When Carmen returned from Minnesota, he could just move in with her.

He heard the toilet flush, then the distinctive click of the medicine cabinet opening.

Uh-oh, he thought.

Five seconds later, the bathroom door slammed open, hitting the wall, and his sister stomped out. “You shit!” She hurled the book at him. Dean ducked; the book hit the wall above him and dropped onto his lap. “You little worm!” Dean felt the fear in his belly, his body remembering all the times she'd beat him up when they were kids. Mickey would hold her long arms out to the sides, hands forming rigid claws, being the monster, and he'd have to run and hide, because if she caught him—she always caught him—she'd punch him repeatedly, over and over, in the exact same spot on his shoulder, until he started bawling and begging.

She was really mad; no telling what she'd try to do.

“You shit, you better give them back to me.”

Dean said, ‘Take it easy, Mick. C'mon now—”

“You sold them, didn't you?” She towered over him, her shins against the low coffee table.

“I didn't sell them.” He grasped the book, holding it up to have something between them. “I gave them to Carmen.”

“Carmen
Roman?
” From the way Mickey's face bloomed red, Dean knew he'd made a mistake. “That
bitch?
” Mickey did not like Carmen. Carmen had that effect on most women, Dean had noticed.

“You can get more. Just call your doctor, tell him your purse was stolen or something.” He knew he shouldn't be afraid. He'd faced worse in Lincoln.

Mickey lifted one long leg and stepped over the table. Her hands came down on his bare shoulders, nails digging deep. She moved her face in on him. Dean's body went rigid, every muscle quivering.

“Get out,” she said.

Dean slammed the book against the side of her head.

Mickey's hands came up off his shoulders; her body straightened above him, wavered, then went backward over the coffee table. Her feet flew up, her head hit the hardwood floor. Dean winced at the sharp sound, the book still clenched in his hand. For a few seconds, she did not move. He stared at the bottoms of her Nikes—purple, white, and gray—propped up on the table. He heard a sudden intake of breath, the feet came off the table, Mickey tipped her head forward and looked up at him, her face frozen in an expression so odd that Dean almost laughed. For a moment, very brief, he thought everything would be okay. Mickey rolled to her side, got onto her hands and knees, and climbed to her feet. Without looking back, she tottered into her bedroom. The door closed. Was she all right? Dean didn't want to follow her into her room. He sat quietly on the sofa, surprised to discover that he really didn't care whether she was all right or not. It was her own damn fault. He'd only been defending himself. He looked at the book in his hand and smiled. The title stood out crisp and clear against the buff-colored cover. He could see the fibers in the paper. He explored the room with his eyes. Everything he looked at came back in hard focus, as if his vision had suddenly improved. He liked the sensation that went with that. He tried to define it but could only come up with the word big. He felt big inside his skin. He could feel the air pressing against his taut integument, holding him in. Opening the book, he read a few lines at random. The archaic language struck him as profound, though puzzling. “
Oh doe not die, for I shall hate /All women so, when thou art gone / That thee I shall not celebrate / When I remember, thou wast one.

What the hell was that supposed to mean? Waste one what? One doe? Dean closed the book and set it on the coffee table. The old-fashioned spelling was really throwing him.

He decided he'd better check on Mickey. He knocked on her door. No response. He pushed the door open and looked in. She was on her back on the bed.

“Mick?” he called out. She didn't twitch. He entered the room and took a closer look. Her eyes were both blackened. How had that happened? He could hear her breathing through her mouth. Dean backed out of the room and closed the door. Let her sleep. She could sleep all day long, for all he cared.

BOOK: The Mortal Nuts
12.12Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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