The Thirteen (2 page)

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Authors: Susie Moloney

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BOOK: The Thirteen
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ONE

T
HE DRUNK AT TABLE EIGHT
was shouting something at the dancer. Paula couldn’t hear what it was over the music, but from his ugly expression she guessed it wasn’t nice. Then he threw something that landed on the stage in front of poor Rachel. A typical Tuesday night at Blondie’s.

Paula looked away, pretended not to see. Another asshole in the bar. She hated her job.
Hated
.

“What the fuck?” Andy said from behind the bar. “Go see what’s going on.”

“He threw something at Rachel,” Paula said. She and Andy had a sometimes thing, which she also sometimes hated. Today she could smell his cologne on her hair. Chaps. Right now she didn’t like his tone.

“I said go
see,”
he snarled, and turned his back to her.

Paula groaned and grabbed her tray, wet with spilled beer, and headed for the fray.

There were only about ten people in the whole bar. It was early, just a couple of hours into her shift. The man had been drunk when she’d got there, obnoxious, loud. She’d picked him out right away. When the first dancer came on, he’d shut up and Paula had hoped that would be it.

“Excuse me, sir,” she said. Even as she did she tensed against the inevitable transfer of his anger. His spittle.

Wet-eyed, he tried to focus. Paula had a horrible moment of bar clarity as she imagined this guy stumbling home to his family and picking a fight with his sober, half-awake wife.
Keep your voice down, honey, you’ll wake the kids—

Shut the fuck up—

The man ignored Paula and lurched to his feet, yelling at Rachel to get her fat ass off the stage.

At Rachel’s feet was an olive. She must have stepped on it, because it was flattened and the pimento had separated. It must be what the man had thrown at her. Rachel’s face was red and her movements were choppy. Choppier than usual. Andy didn’t exactly run the A-list on the first shift.

“Sir,” Paula repeated firmly, “please take your seat.”

An ugly grin began on his mouth and gave up early. “What did you say to me?”

“Could you sit down, please? The dancer’s just doing her job.”

He was middle-aged—they always were—overweight, wearing a good jacket. Probably from out of town. Maybe his business hadn’t gone well. He pointed a fat finger at her. A wedding ring glinted in the stage lights. “And you can shut your fat mouth.”

He reeked of gin, usually a pleasant, juniper-bush smell. Not on him.

“C’mon, mister, please?” She tried to smile but she couldn’t do it.

“Aren’t you just a fucking
crackerjack
bitch …”

She stared at him, and for a moment his red-blotched, booze-slackened face disappeared. His eyes were clear and burning on her, his gaze steady. This time he managed his grin, and for an instant Paula felt as if she should duck.

“You should shut your mouth and get your fat ass home,” he said, not slurring anymore.

“Excuse me?”

She’d had enough, and turned away. The song was just midway through, the few patrons in the bar every bit as interested in what was going on off the stage as on. She raised her hand to try to signal Andy, and then Rachel screamed.

The drunk had grabbed Rachel’s ankle, catching it on a turn, and she fell to the hard stage floor with a terrible thud. Paula heard the air rush out of her.

That was it.

“Let her go!” Paula slapped her tray onto the nearest table. Nickels and quarters jumped wetly in the beery ashtray. It startled the drunk and he twisted his fat head on his fat neck to look at her. His eyes narrowed, whether to focus or to look mean, she wasn’t sure.

He was still hanging on to Rachel’s ankle. “If I want to watch some old cow take her clothes off I’ll stay home with my wife.”

Rachel groaned and tried to kick free of his hand. Her cheap strappy sandal came off and dangled sadly from her foot.

“Let go of Rachel and
sit down
—” Paula could feel bile rising in her throat; the smell of him, mixed with beer and sweat, was almost too much. He was her fourth bad drunk of the week and she was done. Fucking done. Her right hand clenched into a fist and she ached to use it. She said it again: “Let go of her.”

The drunk made his own fist and raised it. “Gimme a reason.”

Paula felt a rush of heat through her body—a tempting heat, a huge desire to lash out, to pound this man’s sweaty face. Her eyes closed as she drew her own fist back like a bow—somewhere far away she heard someone gasp and a titter of laughter
hit him kid knock him to the floor
. Then she thought of her daughter, Rowan. Twelve and at home alone, probably curled up in front of the TV, maybe homework in her lap, waiting for her mom to call on her break. She did not hit him.

She opened her eyes to see the drunk backed up against the stage, hands up, palms out, Rachel sitting up, sobbing and rubbing her ankle, just as Andy got there.

“Back off!” Andy shouted.

Paula’s fist was still cocked and she realized Andy was talking to her. Her arm dropped to her side. She laughed nervously. “Whoa,” was all she could think of to say.

“She was going to fucking hit me,” the drunk said.

“Sit down,” Andy said to the drunk, who was suddenly innocent
take it easy buddy what kind of joint you running
as if he had never grabbed Rachel, as if he’d never made a fist at Paula.

“Andy—” Paula started. He turned to her angrily and pointed to the back. “Get outta here. Dump your tray and change at the bar.”

“I’m not missing a shift for this loser,” she protested.

“You’re not missing shit, Paula. You’re fired.”

Her mouth dropped open. He had to be kidding.

“You’re kidding.”

Andy pointed again to the bar. “Go.”

She grabbed her tray and stomped away. Behind her she heard a guffaw. Her stomach got tight and she was momentarily thrown again, this time by fear. She hated herself for it. She set her tray on the bar carefully, and then she lifted the ashtray with her change from the puddle of beer and put that beside the cash.

She was at a loss. She’d stomped out of her fair share of jobs, but she’d never been fired.

“Paula, I’m so goddamn sorry,” Rachel said from behind her. Paula turned to find the dancer, an unlit cigarette in her hand, a man’s long denim jacket over her costume. Her eye makeup was smeared. “I’m going for a smoke. Bastards. Thanks for trying, Paula. It’s a sisterhood, eh?” Rachel popped the cigarette into the corner of her mouth.

She waved Rachel away. “Don’t worry about it. Go have your smoke.” Rachel stood a second longer, checked over her shoulder for Andy, who was in a firing mood. When she saw him walking very slowly towards them, she scuttled away.

When he was close enough, Paula said, “What the hell, Andy?”

“You were going to hit a customer—what’s that shit?”

“I didn’t hit him. You’re firing me for something I didn’t even get to do.”

He snorted. “I’m firing you for lots of reasons. That one’s just handy.”

“What?” she said, too loudly. “No way. No fucking way. I’m on time, I work hard enough. What are you talking about?”

Andy stepped back behind the bar and punched keys on the register. It popped open. He got some bills from under the tray. He held them out to her. They both looked at the money.

“Debbie’s hired back,” he said.

Debbie who?

“My girlfriend.”

Ah
. He held out the cash. It was twenties, maybe five of them. A hundred bucks. She laughed softly and shook her head.
Unbelievable
.

“I quit anyway. This place is a dive.”

He handed her the money, not looking her in the eye.

Fuck you
she wanted to add, but her mouth was too dry. She went into the back and got her jacket and purse. When she came out, he still wouldn’t meet her eye. She left by the back door.

She made it as far as the edge of the parking lot before it hit her. She was unemployed. Again.

Worst Tuesday at Blondie’s, ever.


Normally Paula took a taxi home after her evening shift, using tip money, but tonight she headed for the bus. Who knew when she’d have another job. Streetlamps were the only light on the road. Most of the businesses around there were daytime things, wholesale places and electrical shops that turned off their signs to save a buck. A traffic light half a block away flashed red.

The bus was empty, just her and the driver, who stared straight ahead when Paula got on and put her money in the box. By the time she’d sat down—at the back, where the losers sit—she was in full panic, full pity, full fear mode.

What would she tell Rowan? The truth seemed harsh.

Paula pictured Rowan in her school uniform and decided she couldn’t say a thing.

She was twenty-eight years old. She’d just been fired from a bar job. This was not how it was supposed to be. When she’d been a kid back in Haven Woods, bar girl was not on her list of life goals. She couldn’t quite remember what had been, but she could remember sitting for hours in a homemade tent with her friends, dreaming about who they would grow up to be.

Not bar girls.

A sisterhood, Rachel had said.

Six hundred in chequing, a hundred and fourteen in her wallet, courtesy of Andy’s hush money, and thirty in the coffee can at home. There was a brief moment of regret when she thought about her temper and how hard it was sometimes to keep it down. She had really wanted to clock that drunk

(but I didn’t)

She leaned her head against the bus window and watched as industrial turned into downtown, then into residential, across the railroad yard to the wrong side of the tracks. Home.

Every light in the apartment was on, as usual. Paula didn’t mind so much. When she was Rowan’s age, she was never left alone, never mind most nights.

She walked through the apartment, flipping lights off as she went until she was in the kitchenette. Supper things were still on the table, a plate scraped clean, knife and fork, a glass with milk slowly drying in the bottom and chopsticks.

Chopsticks.

On the counter beside the sink was a Styrofoam takeout container, empty. She opened the fridge. Two more takeout containers were in there, one with a serving spoon sticking out the top.

A brown bag in the recycling box was from Captain Wu’s, the receipt for eighteen dollars, which left twelve dollars in the coffee can.

Paula went to Rowan’s door, which was open just a crack, her Ariel nightlight glowing. Rowan still watched
The Little Mermaid
now and then even though she was getting too old.

“Ro?” Paula whispered. She could just make her out under the covers, all limbs and hair. A fierce love rose in her, as familiar as the panic and fear, but better.

She was about to give up and close the door; it was nearly eleven.

“Mom? How come you’re home?”

“Ro, did you have takeout?”

“Mmm, yeah. Delivery.”

“Where did you get the money?”

“From the emergency can.”

“Who said you could use that? That money’s for emergencies—”

Rowan sat up and rubbed her eyes. “It
was
an emergency. There was nothing to eat.”

Paula groaned. “Rowan! There was tinned soup. Tuna. Leftover casserole from Sunday—I know you don’t love it, but we can’t just have takeout whenever we freaking want.” She was trying to stay calm, but it was hard, thinking of the thirty dollars that had been in the can, reducing their total wealth now to

six hundred in chequing, fourteen in my purse,
twelve
in the can—

“Jeez, I’m
sorry
. I had homework. I didn’t feel like cooking.” Rowan flopped backwards and closed her eyes.

“Ro—” Paula started.

“I’m
sorry
, Mom. I have to go to sleep. Can’t you ground me tomorrow?”

“It’s not funny, Ro.”

She turned over onto her side and Paula could hear a change in her breathing. Then she spoke again. “I’m sorry. Don’t be mad.”

Eighteen dollars. What was that? Bread and milk and eggs, maybe the paper.

“I’m not,” Paula finally said. “Not really. I love you.” She backed out of the room, remembering to leave her daughter’s door open just a crack.

In the kitchen she pulled the leftover takeout from the fridge and ate it with the chopsticks, standing up, not tasting it. Her throat was thick, wanting to cry, to freak out.

What was lower than bar waitress? Not too much.

Welfare, she guessed. Rowan’s tuition was paid to the end of the year, thanks to her mother, but after that she’d have to go to public school. She didn’t even have a car they could live in, although there was a beater for sale across the street. She passed it every day.

She threw the takeout container into the trash, then dropped to the sofa and picked up the remote. She turned on the TV to snow, then noticed a note taped to the back of the remote. She squinted to read it.
You didn’t pay cable Mom
.

She flicked off the set and soon she was asleep, dreamless except for one moment in the middle of the night when she thought she heard her mother calling her to get up. It was
time for—

It was a beautiful morning, but little of it bled though the frosted glass windows of the second-floor bathroom at St. Mary’s Academy for Girls. Rowan was with Nicki and Caleigh. Nicki had stolen a couple of cigarettes from her mother’s pack. They were all crowded into the last stall and Nicki was about to light one.

Caleigh had shoved gum in the smoke detectors. It was bright pink against the rest of the gobs of gum, some so ancient they had lost all colour.

Nicki flicked the lighter (also pinched from her mother) and held the flame to the end of the cigarette. It caught and flared briefly, like a firework. Rowan and Caleigh—children of non-smokers—flinched and stepped back a little.

Nicki inhaled and coughed roughly, but not as much as a person might expect. Then she held it out to Caleigh. “Don’t just stare at it. Smoke it, dork.”

With a glance at Rowan, Caleigh put it in her mouth like a straw. She sucked on it once, then burst into terrible, deep coughs, as if she had lung cancer or something.

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