For spring, though, to combat the Springtime Breezes of Fear, I decide that I am Going to Be Happy. So I don’t call Necro (who never calls anymore anyway), or Lip Cheese, or Toby. There’s literally no Fires Gone Wild Cancun Fuckfest through all of March. So I stop checking NecronicA, and spend more time outside sitting on benches around town, where it’s flu-warm, enough for the shops to prop their doors open on rubber-bottomed kickstands.
The cashier at the 7-Eleven asks me How you doing, and I tell him, “Everything’s chugging along!” and I pause and look closely to see if there’s any change in his face, to see if I’ve caused him to look deep into the sad trash that is his life.
A few times, I even visit Wicked College John, who is now at the rehabilitation section of the hospital. He can stand now; he shuffles around the bed in his room, and I nod approvingly. He turns his head and looks at me for a few seconds. “TV?” he says, and then, in another visit, he says, “This show? Hellstache?” and then, in another, “Let’s listen to that Rusted Root bootleg now.”
Back home, Mom is microwaving a cookie for dessert. “Jobs? Anything?”
“Had some really exciting conversations!” I say, after I interview with the managers at Zabb’s and Java Joe’s and Dick’s Sporting Goods. And on the back of a grocery receipt, Mom writes down numbers of some temp agencies I haven’t called.
The next morning, in the kitchen, when I handful Product 19 from the box for breakfast, Fake Dad No. 3 stirs up a fiber drink and asks how I am.
“Doing great, spiritually!” I say. And on my bed, he leaves pamphlets for the retreat. There’s a green background and a picture of a mountain on the front and the address of the retreat center. The text on the inner flap has a heading, in a cursive font, that says: THE BUFFALO THAT ROAM THE MIND. On a Post-it stuck to the pamphlet, Fake Dad No. 3 has written, in the teacher-like scribble I’d get on homework papers: “Great for exploring excess & what we discussed!”
And it’s like I’m creating a Happiness Rolodex. The Nate that Necro and Garrett Alfieri and Fake Dad No. 3 think I am, who needs help? Gone like ads in last year’s newspaper.
And, by the time we get to Easter-ish, it’s T-shirt weather. And at some point, there comes a time when there comes a time. So insert Rambo gearing up, cartridge into gun, knife into bootleg, as I test the Happy Rolodex on Toby and Lip Cheese at the Airplane Booth at Applebee’s. I tell them, off the top turnbuckle:
“Life’s working out! Putting the ‘joy’ in ‘enjoyment.’”
And I’m saying to myself please, please let Toby remember that time I thought I saw him sniffle when the Miami Dolphins dumped Flutie Flakes on the locker room floor and danced on them (“It’s the moisture in my nose!”), or the time Lip Cheese tried to tell everyone that a laser was a solid object.
Instead, Toby heaves his mutton-pink forearms onto the tabletop. He looks at me, face heavy, like he’s about to tell me he’s pregnant. “Look, I don’t know what you just said there,” he says. “But we have some bad news.”
Lip Cheese jumps in. “My friend Lewellyn? At the County Clerk? She told me there was a fire at Bambert’s Weapons.”
Toby closes his eyes and nods. “Retaliation burn-down.”
“She said the sprinkler system was disabled,” Lip Cheese says. “I drove by there. The fire was in the back room, so I couldn’t see anything, but there was somebody from the fire department walking around the building with a pair of tongs and placing these little bits of burnt cloth into a paint can.”
“You guys seem to have a lot of hostility,” I say. “This is a bit touched, man.”
“I’ve been thinking about this, especially after that laser pointer,” Toby says. “Look at NecronicA: Necro draws a picture, building burns down. Necro draws a picture, building burns down. That pattern, over and over. And the buildings that have had fires set to them? Those homeless shelters? These kind of liberal places? And you remember how at Weapons of Mankind, they were complaining about their treatment within the community, and they were all, you know, bruahrahrahrahrahrahrah”—he makes these motions with his hands, like he’s a bear clawing at a tree— “bruahrahrahrahrah state laws; bruahrahrahrahrah, like totally anti? So maybe the first fire—the explosion—let’s just say Weapons of Mankind did that one, acting out against the public access building and the neighborhood. Then, maybe, suppose the next few fires somebody set maybe out of protest against the Weapons of Mankind explosion—Race-War Amalgamation, etc. Then, Weapons of Mankind in turn sets the fires at the shelters in retaliation for those fires. Then”—and the seriousness in Toby’s face breaks for a second, and he actually giggles—“someone breaks in to Bambert’s Weapons, disables the sprinkler, and sets it aflame. I mean …”
The thing I should say here is that Toby’s not mentally disabled. I saw him once tutoring kids at lacrosse camp. He talked about split dodges, keeping the stick head behind the shoulder for an overhand shot, building power from your hips and legs when you shoot on the run. I’ve seen him make sense.
“What about every other fire this year, Toby?” I say.
Toby slaps Lip Cheese on the arm, gestures toward me, and smirks. “Well I would imagine there would be some regular fires in there too, Nate.”
All I can even think to do is shrug at Toby as hard as I can. Lip Cheese, though, flips through more of his documents, an inch-high stack this time, stopping at a page with a lot of white space and two bold headings near the middle and bottom.
“This is a bunch of stuff from some court folder—court papers, news articles—from 1986, that says Bambert L. Tolby quote ‘defrauded thirty-one investors of $571,000 which Mr. Tolby claimed would be used to fund the development of a film, purportedly titled Letters to God and the Third Reich and said to be based on Mr. Tolby’s historical research on World War II,’” Lip Cheese says. He slides his index finger down another page, “Mr. Tolby fabricated twenty-one messages from the IMG World agency to mislead investors about production, marketing, and expenditures for the movie.” He moves his finger down the page over the paragraphs, each of them numbered. “The film budget Mr. Tolby produced was later discovered to be identical to a budget plan for an independent horror film produced in Prentiss, Mississippi.” He reads again, “After six years, Tolby had produced a promotional poster for the film and a two-minute film trailer …” He flips to what looks like a stapled-together portion of a transcript: “Somebody here says the movie had themes of white supremacy,” Lip Cheese says. “It doesn’t say what kind.”
Toby nods whenever Lip Cheese pauses, the fake listener’s nod.
“It also says that ‘from 1981 through 1985, Mr. Tolby regularly attended community functions in Brockport, as well as meetings held by the Rochester Professionals Society, to solicit investments. On April 18, 1981, he began renting an office at 92 Main Street in Brockport for a production company, Interesting Films, LLC. In or about 1982, he hired two staff to run telemarketing operations, which were carried out to seek investments.’”
I have no idea what most of more-or-less any of that means. Our waitress says, “Hi guys!” and I tell her coffee and French fries.
“And, then, the document says that he spent $26,240 of investments toward renovations on his home living room, $3,137 toward rare movie posters, $8,421 on a vacation, and $16,000 toward a German military sword said to be used during World War II.” Lip Cheese looks up. “There’s some other page in here that says he got some number of years in prison. He had to pay back I even forget how much.”
“And, Nate,” Toby takes two pieces of paper out of his Bills vest. Suddenly our booth smells tender like garbage. The papers look crumpled, and some kind of mustard appears to have crusted up on them. “I did a little dumpster diving. These are receipts from Necro’s trash.” He flicks one of the receipts, an 8½-by-11 sheet of paper, violently with his middle finger. “I also found a receipt from some place called Tazmanian Cash in South Carolina …”
“They didn’t have a website that I could find,” Lip Cheese says.
“Twenty-seven hundred dollars, total. Purchases of something called Quickmatch; purchases of potassium chlorate, dextrin, lactose, because he’s, I don’t know, lactose intolerant?” He uncrumples a receipt from Chase-Pitken. “Three hundred in fertilizer? With ammonium nitrate? All of this, on Andrea Fanto’s credit card.”
“Goddammit, Toby!” I say.
Whatever Happy Rolodex I had shrinks into my chest like drying palm sweat on a steering wheel, and not just because Necro apparently has a credit card. It’s more that, Cockdrama In Motion or Actual Seriousness—I can’t tell—maybe Toby has a point: Maybe Necro is trying to kill someone.
Toby passes the receipts across the table to me. “Talk to Necro about these, Nate. Show them to his face. It’s moral to confront people.”
“Should we all go together?” I say.
“You know him,” Toby says. “I never hang out with Necro when you’re not there—me and him have never branched off into being our own friends. But you, Nate: You have the Winston Churchill Golden Olive Branch. Let him know we can go to the police, take him down to the Zone for real this time.”
Toby hands me the receipts, which I fold into the pocket of my running pants. “And think about who your friends are,” he says. “Provided you’re not still Friend to All Animals.” Toby cracks up, mouth opening half-moon-shaped with his baby gremlin teeth.
Lip Cheese goes, “Hooo!”
“Those stuffed animals were Lip Cheese’s,” I try to say over them. “Lip Cheese’s!”
But the next afternoon, at home, I’m blushing about Friend to All Animals even in private. I’m so embarrassed that I actually call Necro. I leave a message on the Robot Voice Machine saying: “We have some real Winston-Churchill-ing to do, Necro. You haven’t been around recently, and I’m really worried what you’re up to.”
Then I think: Maybe Necro actually left town. Then I go back to Applebee’s. And, as if he’d known via Doppler Natecast, Necro is sitting there, at the Airplane Booth.
I haven’t seen him in a while. His face looks a little less swollen. His forearms are hairier, and there’s more white in his eyes where they’re usually bloodshot. He shakes my hand. “Long time, no talking points.”
He hands me a bottle of Glenfiddich, aged twelve years. Because today—April 20th—I also forgot to tell you, actually is my twenty-first birthday.
Any muscle I had is chewing gum now. Any idea that Necro was the Unabomber on a Unabombing Gone Wild Cancun Fuckfest Spree falls totally out of my brain. My point all along being this: Necro’s a nice guy and I just want him to be around.
“I know it probably seems like I’ve been, you know, self-sequestering a lot recently,” Necro says. “But you’ve hit the big two-one.”
The bottle is rich-pervert, gray-chest-hair caliber, and comes in a cardboard tube, with rounded edges and a cap you need a long thumbnail to pick off.
“Built in the Glen of Fiddich, Gaelic for ‘Valley of the Deer,’” I read from the fold-out card inside the tube, “with notes of peat and spices.”
“I drink it for the peat,” Necro says, flipping through the cards on our table’s ring-bound dessert menu. “Spices.” He puffs some laughing through his cheeks. “Babies love the amped-up taste of Paul Prudhomme’s habanero-banana puree,” he says, in his pro-wrestler Extreme Voice.
I sputter, like laughing out car exhaust. Then I look up. “Wait. What?”
He waves one hand, batting the comment away. “I don’t know.”
“Gerber Cajun Selections?” I say. “Put the fire back in your baby’s dietary whatever.”
“Take and transcend the tongues of the earth with our Stage 3 Sweet Potatoes and Atomic Jalapeno: Buuurn your baby’s face.”
Necro pays for my fries, and we get in the Vomit Cruiser, and the car’s smell, a caramel-and-newspaper perfume, is like a little arcade token dropping into my brain’s coin slot. I brace my foot against the seat well like I always do to substitute for a seat belt. We drive past Irondequoit Bay, the way we would every night we were off to a party, and we knew Toby would’ve bought tobacco or a cube of Labatt’s and a six of Shea’s to class it up. And I’d be wondering what girl would be there that I could stare at all night.
We turn onto a dirt road where twigs flick the windshield. But near my shoe, underneath an unfinished bottle of Surge, I see a chapstick-sized metal tube, and my temples turn into absolute knuckles. Because, I wonder: There is no way that is a laser pointer. And if it is, how would Necro possibly know me and Toby were looking for the Nintendo Power Bucolic Farm, got lost, and ended up in a field? I suppose, though, Necro is sort of good at finding us—he did find us at Mighty Taco in Buffalo that time when nobody told him we were going to see WWF. Because, am I going to have to realize about Necro what everybody apparently realized, like when Missy Giordano went out with Matty De Luca, and then she found the single sentence “THIS IS NOT FAIR” written on a piece of paper somehow slipped under her bedroom pillow, and how everybody knew that Necro did it? Or how that one time when we were driving back through the woods from Tavis Porcelli’s party out in Macedon, and we spent the whole ride back saying nothing, and Necro’s driver’s-side window was open the way it is right now, except then, he turned to me and said: “Hey Nate?” And I went, “What?” and he went, “What if I killed you?” And the receipts Toby gave me feel like they’re glowing in my pocket, but then I look closer, and the metal object is only a keychain with a pewter skeleton bone, so everything is fine again.
Necro drives us to a clearing, and, look at this: this pond-slash-swamp with all of these boats in it: oil tankers, yachts; ships with rust holes big enough to fit a phone booth through, ships with chairs and trash bags piled up in their windows; ships shouldering into the water.
“How’d you find this place?”
“Bored. It’s a ship retirement yard. The navy and the ports send old ships here to let them sort of eat themselves in—cannibalizing. I thought you’d have fun staring at them. Happy Birthday, Part II: The Proto-Stachening.”
The dirt at the edge of the water is cold and dry. Under a shirt in the Vomit Cruiser’s backseat, Necro finds a Red Wings plastic game cup with a yellowing logo. He pours the scotch halfway up.
“If I could, I’d have hired a pimp on retainer to get you a trailer full of lady people, upon which you could implement a glorious Symphony of Cock, an old-fashioned Utica Chinstrap,” Necro says.
“The old Joseph Avenue Mason’s Jar,” I say.
“The old Mack Avenue, Detroit, Mr. Potato Head.”
“That’s how they do it on Mack Avenue.”
I hear a gulp in the pondwater. Even though, really, I’d rather talk about whether I’ll be lonely the rest of my life.
“Cheers?” Necro says. We share the cup. I take the first sip.
“Golden chandeliers of tasteness,” Necro says.
After I take the after-sip “ah,” I go, “I try to call you, but you’ve been off Maverick Jetpantsing. I never see you!”
He shakes his head. “I’m still living with Dad, still cutting straps in Building 38, the ground-up cow bones still look like couscous.”
“What about your prize money to live on your own?”
Necro breathes. “Bambert said he has money, from businesses, people from the churches, so he can take and start giving me his donated financings. I paid him this $2,500, this broker’s fee type of thing, which I think I told you about” (I’m sort of flattered he remembers) “but he keeps having setbacks. He’s been having more trouble acquiring various easements on some of these apartments, you know, these property structures, living quarters. So I’m waiting that out. That, coupled with immersing myself in NecronicA …”
Which, if Necro has no Maverick Jetpants planned yet, now is my chance to prove, once and for all, that I Am Happy: “With everything that’s happened with Wicked College John—I’ve been trying to think more positive, thinking about doing something Huge.”
Necro sips the Scotch through his teeth and hands me the cup so the side he drank from is facing away from me. “There was this toaster fire at the weapons shop,” he says. “All it did was blacken one whole wall, but nobody can work there anymore because the house’s innards are basically large panels of charred bread—also known as toast, I guess. Bambert was saying how a few days earlier, a light bulb took and popped in the middle of the night once when the lights were off, so maybe the wiring was inherently flawed, and that sent an unwarranted jolt through the nerve system.”
“Did somebody do it, do you think?”
Necro purses his lips, puffs his cheeks, and breathes through his nose. “If somebody did do it, you’d think they would be, you know, more anthemic than a toaster. But all of Webster hated us anyway. They took and tried to ordinance us out to the Interstate with the porn stores. But that’s why me and some of the Weapons of Mankind trolls are thinking about doing some of the re-lo action out near PA, where they got the Karate and Fireworks store and the Swords and Candy store,” he says. “Somewhere where there’s maybe more of a demographic for us.”
My breath shortens to dried-up coffee nerves. “Wait. Are you leaving?”
Necro jets some air through his nostrils. “Not today. Unless I decide to invent a robotic cake.”
Our shadows disappear and reappear as a cloud passes the sun. I rotate the cup with my fingers, forget what part of it Necro drank from, check to see if the sunlight shows any saliva reflection on the rim, and take a sip anyway. The scotch tastes like a well-cleaned mansion library.
“A weapons store,” I say. “I could go along with that, work at a weapons store.”
“But I, you know, completely have my own opportunities, you know?” I tell him. “A Happy Rolodex.”
A wrapper rolls toward us and stops, like it’s startled to be in the presence of humans. I pass the cup to Necro and he chews on the edge of it when he laughs: “Nate Nate Nate.”
And with that alone I feel like I have to start our friendship all over again.
“Why do you want a Plan so bad, Nate?” he says.
I think about that for a minute. “I don’t have any Holy Grail Points like you. It’s not so easy.”
“It’s not supposed to be easy! That’s the paradox, Nate! On New Year’s, I decided I was going to take and Not Suck. I was going to be a man in better faith, who wasn’t so straight-jacketed by his own facticity. I was going to take and initiatize myself.”
“But I have been feeling better! I’m putting the joy in …”
“Liar!” he bark-whispers. “You Plan-less, Plan-less, Plan-less liar who has lied! I see your long line of hang-ups on the answering machine!”
“What am I supposed to do?”
His eyes widen for a second. “Anything. Throw a punch out there, get on a bus.”
A yacht rotates, whale-like, toward its side. On the back, its name says SEVENLY. Necro yawns, the way he does, at any time of day, before he’s about to get going.
“Welp,” he says, the way he ends “well” with a P, “in the name of conversational protocol, I need to say now that I should drive you back.” He throws his Red Wings cup toward the boats, but the wind slings the cup back over his shoulder. “There’s a thing going on tonight with the Weapons of Mankind trolls. Anyway. Happy birthday.”
“Wait, Necro,” I say. “No Maverick Jetpantsing just yet?”
He raises one eyebrow, investigative reporterly.
“Or, nothing,” I say. “What I meant was, you’re not mad at me or anything, are you?”
A Tops grocery bag skids across the dirt.
“I mean, when Wicked College John got injured, you seemed mad at me,” I say. “I haven’t seen you around so much since that day—it’s just been me and Toby.”
Necro smiles into his shoulder, which maybe means he still likes me. Because I did okay today Bringing-the-Funny-wise, right? A Day of Quickness, right? That’s how they do it on Mack Avenue?
“You said on my machine we had to take and do some serious discourse about something?” he says, jamming his boot’s steel-toe into the dirt, which is brownie-soft.
“Oh, no,” I say. “That was it. What we just did.”
Then I say: “Hey, though. What were you going to say to me that one time? Before we went to Weapons of Mankind that night? You were going to say something, like, ‘I think, with you, Nate,’ and you never finished the sentence, because Rambocream showed up.”
“Who?”
“Your friend, with the glasses. His arms are like these flat lengths of an ice cream sandwich.”
He laughs, finally, one single honk, an actual laugh. I feel like heaven struck oil.
“I’m going to take and tell him that,” he says. “He will hate that.”
“But what were you going to say?”
The sun is out now, baking my shoulder. Nothing makes me more nervous than April sun; the Springtime Breezes of Fear are far worse than the Hellstache January Sads. Necro shakes his head. “Maybe I’ll remember. You’ll have to give me time on that one. Patience comes to those who wait.”
Back home, Mom stabs two candles in two chocolate cupcakes, and sings “Happy Birthday” with actual notes. She turns on the kitchen light. No other lights are on in the house, which makes me feel tired. She gets out this white box from the corner spin-drawer, removes the foam insulation from a pint glass inside, washes out the dust, and pours me a pint of Sam at the kitchen table. She cheerses with me.
“I remember, on my twenty-first birthday,” Mom says, shoulders unshriveling for once. “I had finished at MCC, and the one semester I lived in the dorms at St. John’s, my friends gave me a six-pack.”
“Did you ever drink it?”
“I took six classes that semester!” She sets the edges of her lips to her pint glass, leaving tree-trunk-like rings of foam with each sip. “But under the bathroom sinks, there was a removable panel doohickey on the bottom, and below that panel, a hollow space. You weren’t actually supposed to remove the panel, but I hid the cans there and closed the wood panel back on, so that someone else might find it who moved in after me.”
And it’s right here with my mom, where she hugs me Happy Birthday and my palms press into her shoulder fat, that we’ve maybe both said sorry. For the first time in a while, I can stay in tonight in the living room with the Fritos and milk—Inside with a capital In.
Later that night, from the kitchen, the phone rings. When Mom picks up, she peeks around the entrance to the living room, where I’m watching some VCR-Plussed Monday Night Raw. “Toby,” she mouths.
I shake my head and mouth: “No.”
“He’s not here can I take a message?” Mom says. “Okay. Okay. Will do. Bye.”
Before Mom finishes her pint of Sam Adams, she hands me an envelope containing three hundred dollars cash, for rent, which I immediately give back to her.