IT’S NOT DRAMATIC, not really. Not in the least. Not like the movies or TV. It’s kind of small and gnarled but swift as a sparrow, with a pitiful muffled sound of pam! pam! pam! And then there’s this silence except for a ringing that’s far off, like it’s coming from some other room, but I know that can’t be true because we have a one-room apartment, not counting the bathroom, so the ringing must be coming from the upstairs neighbor. Or maybe from the people who live right under us. So I push my ear down hard against the orange shag carpeting because I’m on the floor now. And I listen, listen hard. I hear his breathing above me and I want to shush him but I don’t. I try harder to hear where that ringing is coming from. But it’s not coming from that nice couple below. It’s right here. Right in my head.
I SHOULD HAVE KNOWN the first time we went out. Three years ago this May. We were both broke so we went to Tommy’s on Topanga Canyon Boulevard, near the Beef Bowl, and got these big greasy chili burgers, each with a tomato slice the size of a deck of cards, chili-cheese fries, and king-size cups of Coke. We actually laughed a lot as the chili dripped from our fingers and chins and onto the table and our clothes. The Santa Ana winds were blowing hard so it was a warm night. The stars kind of twinkled, just a bit, their energy being sucked up by the city lights. During a lull in the laughter, Mike leaned toward me, his blond mustache carrying bits of chili, and he said, “You want to be my little Mexican bitch?” I blinked hard, trying to understand what he said. He leaned closer. “Well, do you?”
I LOVE THE VENTURA FREEWAY. Especially when I’m driving north. Away from the Valley. There’s this point when you pass Canoga Park, West Hills, and then Calabasas, and you know you’re on your way. It doesn’t matter where. But you’re on your way because you can feel it.
MOMEE WAS PRETTY MUCH LIKE ME. Or is it the other way around? Anyway, she fell hard for the good-looking ones without regard for anything else. Take Pops, for example. Handsome as all get-out. Kind of looked like a young suntanned John Wayne, but way better looking. No crooked smile like Wayne’s. Actually, no smile at all. He and Momee used to yell at each other but Pops never hit her. She said he went with other women. Usually she called him names and he called her names, and then she’d leave with a bang of the door to stay with Grandma. It happened a lot when I was five or six. Pops used to sit and drink in the dark when she left and I’d lie there listening to him mutter. And then one time, he came to my room and lay down next to me. I pretended to be asleep. And he cried, shaking like a small jackhammer, and smelled my hair. And I pretended even harder to be asleep.
I LIKE DRIVING TO VENTURA. It’s a good, clean drive. This time it’s not just a drive. My bag is packed and sits right behind me in the back seat. This time is different in every way. After the pam! pam! pam! I heard a crack. Cheekbone, left one, just caved in. He never broke a bone before. But that was it. When he drove me to West Hills Emergency, the doctor asked me how this had happened. Mike shot me a look like he’s saying, Okay, it’ll be okay, just lie for me this one more time. But he knew the look I shot back at him said, No, not this time. I will not lie. And I didn’t. That was two weeks ago. He’ll end up serving time because I’m pressing charges. I like my lawyer. Cool lady. She says, Elena, time to begin a new life. What do you want to do? And I think. It doesn’t take long. So now here I sit, in my old Toyota, listening to B. B. King and driving to Ventura. I’m on my way.