Chapter 5
After school was out Chuck sat in his empty classroom and called his aunt’s house in Riverside. Aunt Jane was divorced and worked as an MRI technician at Kaiser. Chuck’s mother had moved in with her a year ago.
“How you doing, Aunt Jane?” Chuck said.
“Living large,” she said, which wasn’t a lie. Aunt Jane loved to cook and eat what she cooked, and she did not skimp on the fat, the flour, the butter, or the sugar. “How about you?”
“Well, let me tell you, I’ve had better weeks.”
“What’s wrong, dear?”
“How about I tell you about it later? I just wanted to check in with Mom.”
“You want me to put her on?”
“How’s she doing?”
“So so.”
“I’m sorry.”
“What for?”
He paused. “That I couldn’t take care of everybody the way I wanted.”
“Hey, Lucky, you’re doing just fine.” She’d called him Lucky ever since he could remember. He used to believe it was prophetic. Now it stung. “You’re taking care of Stan, and that means the world to us.”
“It’s a laugh riot, that’s for sure.”
“You getting enough to eat?” That was her favorite question.
“I am. Stan keeps up on all the specials.”
“That boy,” Aunt Jane said with a laugh. “If we could harness that brain power we’d put men on Saturn.”
“Sure,” Chuck said. “I’ll talk to Mom now.”
He heard the sound of the phone being put down.
Then his mom’s small voice squeaked, “Hello?”
“Hi Mom,” Chuck said.
“Who is it?”
“Chuck.”
“Chuck?”
“How you doing, darling?”
“Who is this?”
“It’s Chuck, your son.” He felt like an idiot, a stranger, a cold stranger who carried misery in a valise. Not a son who could make things happen. He wanted to make her right by willing it over the phone. She deserved it, the way the cards had been dealt.
“Is Stanley all right?” his mother said.
The mention of the name was a lifeline from past to present. Chuck grabbed it. “Yes. Yes, Stan is good. He’s going to outlive us all. He’s working steady and he’s keeping tabs on all the customers. They love him.”
Silence.
“We’ll come out for a visit soon,” Chuck said.
“Who is this?”
The chill of those words hit like a cold, Pacific wave, like when they were a family at the beach, a long ago November, the three of them. When his feet got cold in the ocean and his mother wrapped them up in a towel and rubbed them till they were warm again and now he could not make his mother warm or whole. He could not—
Aunt Jane came back on. “She’s tired, Chuck.”
“You’re a saint, Aunt Jane,” he said.
“Plaster,” she said. “Do come see us when you can.”
“Yes,” he said.
After the call Chuck turned off the lights in the classroom and put his head in his hands and sat there until four-fifteen.
.
“Seven ninety-nine T-bone steak,” Stan said the moment he got into Chuck’s limping Sentra. “Oscar Mayer Deli Shaved Lunchmeat, two for six dollars.”
“Good ones,” Chuck said. It was four-thirty and he was picking up Stan from Ralphs. And this being Tuesday, Stan was eager to share the weekly specials. Sometimes that annoyed Chuck, but today, of all days, it was welcome and familiar. By the time they got home, Chuck told himself, we’ll both be back on solid ground again. We can move on from the events of this one, crazy day.
“DiGiorno Pizza, two for nine dollars,” Stan continued. “Chuck, can we have DiGiorno Pizza tonight?”
“Sounds good.”
“And Coca-Cola, six pack, three for ten dollars.”
“And Coca-Cola, kid.”
Stan loved his job. Ralphs Fresh Fare hired a certain number of the mentally challenged. The prime job was standing inside the doors, welcoming people and handing out the ad paper with the featured deals. Stan took his duties as seriously as a nuclear technician dispensing safety instructions. “I save people the big bucks,” Stan liked to say.
Which was why he always replayed the ads, not reading them, but using the incredible memory that was part of his brain’s circuitry. It was one of those inexplicable quirks of nature, like deaf kids who can play piano without a lesson.
“Chef Boyardee Microwave Cup,” Stan said, “ten for ten dollars. Can we get ten of them?”
“Maybe,” Chuck said.
“Are you going to get married?”
“What?” Sometimes Stan blurted the most random things.
“That teacher at school,” Stan said. “Wendy Tower is her name. She has long hair and green eyes and her body is hubba—”
“Stan.”
“She likes you.”
“I know that.”
“Does she make you gaga?”
“Gaga? Where do you come up with this stuff?”
Stan bobbed his eyebrows.
“If you want DiGiorno’s,” Chuck said, “you knock that off––” Chuck stopped when he saw a plume of black smoke in the sky a couple of blocks away.
“What’s wrong?” Stan said.
“Looks like there’s fire,” Chuck said.
“Fire?”
“Maybe somebody’s car.”
“Can cars catch on fire?”
“Sometimes,” Chuck said. But as he drove on, he knew this was no car fire. It was too big.
And very close.
There was a police presence at the next turn, Chuck’s street. No access. He stopped the car and got out, the door still groaning because of the morning’s rear ender.
A young cop in sunglasses took two steps toward him. “Sir, you’ll have to move your car.”
Chuck didn’t move. He stared. And reality hit. “That’s my house,” he said.
The cop gave a quick nod. “Let the fire department take care of this.”
Stan ran up to Chuck, his eyes wide. “Is that our house, Chuck? What about all our stuff? What about my fish?”
Chuck put his hand up to get Stan quiet. “Stay with the policeman, Stan.”
“Don’t leave me!”
“Stay here!” Chuck didn’t like the hurt look in Stan’s eyes then, but this was a freaking fire. And though the heat of it wasn’t near him, another heat was burning inside him, the conflagration of one very bad day.
“Sir,” the cop said, “you need to stay here, too.”
“So shoot me,” Chuck said and ran down the sidewalk.