DOWN IN THE BASEMENT, I lifted the lid of the box freezer. Light filtered out and lit up my hockey pyjamas. My father had told me that the light shut off when the lid was lowered, but I didn’t believe him. Since I could remember I had toyed with the idea of climbing in and lowering the lid, just to see. But what if I couldn’t open it again? I’d freeze between the rump roasts and the pork ribs.
My arms dove into the freezer and turned some frozen quail over. The birds clicked together like rocks. I saw the butcher paper marked Rosbife. I lifted the package out and unwrapped the paper, but then I heard a sound, someone walking to the bathroom. My father’s clammy feet smacked on the ceramic tiles in the upstairs hallway. I waited for a flush, the sound of water gushing down the pipes buried behind the wall. My father returned to his bed.
I held the block of ice and spat on it. I rubbed the frostiness off the surface. The limpet shell floated in the middle of the block. It had lost some of its colour, so brilliant when it was fresh, like gasoline in a puddle of water, it was now grey and murky, the actual outline of Jesus and the shaded features had faded. People see only what they want to see. My mind filled in the blanks, traced the figure of Jesus wearing his crown of thorns.
I heard my father in the hallway again. He stopped at the top of the stairs. I carefully tucked the block of ice under my arm like a football and straddled the lip of the box freezer. It was going to be tight. The basement light flickered on. I looked around the room one last time, saw my father’s white feet appear on the top step. I took a deep breath, slinked into the freezer, a piece of meat jabbing at my ass. I lowered the lid until I heard the sucking sound of the seal. It was pitch-black.
I panicked. What if my father looked in the freezer? How would I explain it? What if he didn’t leave? I’d have to come out or else I’d freeze. What if I couldn’t lift the lid from inside? I couldn’t hear if my father had left but I knew I couldn’t stay in there longer than a minute or so. I decided to count from one hundred backwards. As I counted down I thought of hot things, the beach and the sun. I was so scared I wanted to pee. I thought that might warm me up only for a little bit until it froze against my skin. I was almost at one. I took in a deep breath and pushed up on the freezer’s lid. He had gone. And then it hit me: I had to get rid of the shell. I wasn’t quite sure how to do it. I couldn’t flush it. I couldn’t hide it. Shivering, I tucked my tongue between my clicking teeth. I placed the shell back in the open freezer. For now. The glow from the freezer spread across our table. I saw a purple ring soaked into the tablecloth. I shivered as I traced the ring with my finger and tasted the wine on my tongue.
On my way home from school, I saw Adam coming out of Future Bakery. “Hey!” I yelled. He didn’t walk away like he used to. He reached into his bundle buggy and offered me a bun like a magician would pull a rabbit out of his hat. I smiled.
I shifted the weight of my backpack and waited for him to say something. When he didn’t, I tore into the hot bun. His lump looked bigger, more purplish. And yet he remained so calm; the only still thing as the wind rattled everything around us. Adam grabbed the handle of his cart and turned away from me. He raised his steaming bun in the air without looking back. A goodbye, I thought.
I smiled all the way to James’s place. I found him chomping on bacon, tearing at the chouriço he had pitched on a fork. I hadn’t brought the food over but I recognized it as our dinner the night before. Ricky sat cross-legged on the rug and folded the laundry.
“Why are you here? Aren’t you sick?” James said, sopping up liver sauce with cornbread and stuffing it in his mouth, a little bit of gravy pooled at the corners.
“Who brought the food over?” I asked.
“Your sister,” Agnes said. “I saw her leave it in the usual spot. I explained to James that maybe you weren’t feeling well and you sent her over.” Her eyes got big, urging me to play along. “You must have forgotten.” She resumed humming in her rocking chair, which didn’t rock; she had placed some stones under the runners, secured the chair so it stood reclined but firm. The housedresses she wore, all dark with tiny floral prints or polka dots, had been stolen from her mother’s house and could barely zip up. She looked much older than fifteen. She watched James eat.
Strips of orange hissed along the garage floor. November meant the baseboard heaters would be on for most of the day. I sat on the trunk across from James. I could feel the lock pressed up against the back of my knee.
James side-saddled his chair, pointed his fork at me. “What did you tell your sister?”
“Nothing. She’s not stupid you know.”
“You don’t have to bring food around anymore. Tell your sister that too,” he said. “I can take care of things.” He lowered his eyes, brought the meat on the fork to his mouth, and chewed it slowly.
“Just wanna help,” I said.
“That’s very nice of you, Antonio—” Agnes began before James raised his hand to shut her up. She pushed herself out of the chair and went to the ladder, but then changed her mind. Instead, she went to the counter, picked up a wooden spoon, and stirred red Kool-Aid in a plastic jug.
“You need to drink milk!” James said, slapping the table with his open hand. His voice softened. “For the baby.”
Agnes stopped stirring. She placed the wooden spoon back on the counter. She returned to her rocking chair, lowered herself slowly into the seat, and pulled the blanket up to her chin. Her knuckles formed eight bumps on the blanket as she held tight.
“Why’s he in a bad mood?” I whispered in Ricky’s ear. James was always with Agnes or Ricky or Manny, and I could never catch him alone to ask him why he’d come to my garage. I had a feeling his shitty mood had something to do with that night.
“I’m not sure,” Ricky whispered back. “Hey, you still mad at Manny?”
“What do you think?” I couldn’t help the suckiness in my voice. “The shit dresses up in a velvet cape and goes out for Halloween with a cross on his chest flashing a damn lapa he’s made out of cardboard. Asshole.”
“He was only kidding.”
“Have you seen your friend?” James said. “Adam, is it?”
“He’ll be okay.” James got up from his chair and stood in front of me.
“I’m sorry,” I said. I knew I had to apologize for passing out the night he came to the garage. He came to visit me to be absolved for what he had done to Adam, for letting the anger in him bubble up to the surface. It was embarrassing for both of us.
James placed his hand on my shoulder. “Let’s all go see a movie, huh? My treat.”
James stepped over to Agnes and whipped the blanket from her. He looked like a whole bunch of electricity had just been shot into him. He teased Agnes, tried to help her up and dance a kind of jig with her.
“You go,” she said.
He wouldn’t take no for an answer, tried to twirl her. Ricky kicked the trunk with his heels, giggled like a little kid.
“I just want to take a hot bath at the house,” Agnes said. “I’m always cold.”
“Go,” James said, spanking her bum. “But wait until it’s dark, okay?”
“I can’t come,” Ricky said. “My father hasn’t been sleeping well.” He started to fold the clothes again, carefully pressing the creases down with his hand. He had two piles going: one was James’s and the other belonged to Agnes. I fought hard to not think of the way Ricky handled their clothing. These were the things that touched Agnes’s skin and brushed against James’s body. “He gets up a lot during the day and he likes me to be there, just in case he needs something.”
Senhor Anselmo and his brother were painters at the College Park shopping centre and had both been told they weren’t needed any longer. I had overheard my father telling my mother that Poom Pooms, Amilcar’s father, had also lost his job. Things in the city were slowing down. My father blamed it all on Emanuel’s murder—it had poisoned the city. My mother said it was a curse.
James turned to me. “That makes it you and me, kid.”
Edite was coming over tonight to look after us. My mother had taken another shift, and after my fainting spell my father suggested we shut the garage for a couple of days until I got my strength back. I knew Edite would cover for me.
“What about Manny?”
“He’s out for the day. He’s doing a little something for me.” He wiped his hairy forearm along his chin and cheek and flung his parka over his shoulders. His eyes peeked out below the fur-trimmed hood and you couldn’t rub out the smirk on his face. Ricky had gone with him to the army surplus store to buy the coat. Ricky said James had been impressed with all the zippers and hidden pockets. Sold.
“You’re growing fast,” James said, a bounce in his step as he looked down at my feet.
My cords were short, a good two inches above my ankles. I was taller and felt stronger. My throat had been sore, at times I squeaked, and I had noticed that hair was growing in places, fine golden hair. My big toes pushed at the suede of my Roots Earth shoes.
We got on the eastbound streetcar at the corner of Bathurst and Queen. James guided me to the back. He plopped himself on the long back seat, stretched out his legs as if the whole streetcar was his.
I looked out the window, up to the needle tip of the CN Tower. It was just over a year ago that a helicopter had hovered above the tower, dangling its final piece, and the city froze. Manny, Ricky, and I had stood in the middle of our street. People got out of their cars like zombies and gathered together to look up. The tallest free-standing structure in the world. We could do anything now.
The streetcar rattled along the tracks: Resendes Fish Market, Shoppers Drug Mart, Army Surplus, and Duke’s. Woolworth’s had signs announcing it was shutting down. In between we passed rows of stores that had already closed. For Sale signs were plastered everywhere. We passed Spadina Avenue and trundled toward University Avenue, past City Hall and Nathan Phillips Square, now empty, the rally long forgotten, nothing changed. The skating rink would open soon. A few kids were walking along the subway grates, their jackets puffed up with air as they threw their hats up into the sky. I counted how long the hats hovered in the air before veering off and crashing into the sidewalk. “I’m sorry I passed out the other night,” I said as we approached our stop. “I saw you and I don’t know … things kinda closed in on me.”
“It’s okay.”
We got off at Yonge.
“I was surprised to see you there.”
“Forget it,” he said, flipping his hood over his head.
“Why’d you come?”
“Doesn’t matter now,” he said, walking away to the intersection. We walked up Yonge Street, across from the Eaton Centre and all its glass. “Imperial Six okay?” James said.
He didn’t answer.
As we crossed Shuter Street I looked over my shoulder to glance at Massey Hall. The Good Brothers had played there last week. Terri only blared disco through the house, practising the latest steps printed on the inside cover of K-tel’s Disco Dynamite album. I liked Queen, whose concert at Maple Leaf Gardens the night before had sold out. James didn’t know they were my favourite band. I didn’t tell him because if he knew he’d find a way to get tickets, and then I’d feel like I owed him. Besides, I’d feel doubly bad when I turned him down. The concert was at night and my mom would never have let me go.
“The Terrace roller skating rink is down there.” I pointed east. I could see the north wing of St. Michael’s Hospital. It had been a long time since I had visited my parents at work, my father proudly ushering me past the huge statue of St. Michael before taking me to every department, parading me in front of all the nuns who ran the place. He had been the housekeeping supervisor. Things hadn’t worked out. That was three years ago, before he bought the truck.
We finally arrived at the outdoor square, underneath the Imperial’s marquee panels.
“There’s Star Wars. It’s still playing,” I said. “Or what about Close Encounters of the Third Kind?” I stared at the poster of the big spaceship with all its lights coming over the horizon.
Soon we were sitting in the theatre, a large bag of popcorn between us. When I reached for my drink under my seat, my cheek rubbed against James’s arm. The hairs on my head tingled and I twitched, the static in my legs and down to my toes felt like swarming bees. The last time we were alone was in my basement. I tried to watch the movie. Our hands touched as we dug for popcorn. I felt a pinch in my groin. The second time it happened the pinch turned into a knot. By the third and fourth time I found myself thinking about when to dig in so that our hands would touch. I tried hard to focus on the screen—on the actor in the movie looking out into the suburban neighbourhood he lived in, and everyone going on with their everyday lives, as they always had. Then James leaned in against me, his shoulder lowered to touch mine. I closed my eyes and then something exploded in my head, the image of blood being spilled a few buildings away. Emanuel’s blood.
The bag of popcorn tumbled into the aisle and I ran through the corridor, down all the stairs, heard James coming after me. I made my way outside and ran until I found myself in front of 245 Yonge—the windows of Charlie’s Angels now completely boarded up. I looked up to the rooftop. Then I bent over and puked into the gutter. James was there. He rubbed my back with his hand, small circles. Some cars honked their horns. I wished he would stop.
I wiped the spit from my cheek, tried to breathe through my mouth so I wouldn’t have to smell the sourness of my puke. “Leave me alone! I’m fine.”
James put his fists in his coat pockets.
“Hey, kid, that guy bothering you?” one man yelled from his car.
“Just leave, James.”
He punched a telephone pole. The honks kept coming.
“Leave!”
He began to walk up Yonge Street. He turned back a couple of times but that was it. I was afraid to be alone so I followed behind him and saw him kick a mailbox over. I imagined catching up to him to tell him I was sorry for ruining the movie, sorry for behaving like a little kid.
I was just a few paces behind when James crossed at College Street and began to walk west. It was five o’clock and starting to get dark. I was cold and wanted to go home. A van drove up beside James, slowed down. James stopped, leaned in to the open window to give the driver directions. I came up behind him and saw the driver, a man in a suit, the knot of his tie bigger than my fist. “A hundred for the both of you,” I caught the man saying.
“Fuck off, buddy.” James kicked the van’s side as it sped off.
A shiver ran through me; my teeth chattered. “I want to go home.”
“So go home. I didn’t bring you here—you followed, remember.”
“A little young, no?” a voice ricocheted off the building next to us.
I followed James’s look to a boy who sat on a huge city planter. We crossed the road. The boy’s jeans were so tight you could clearly trace his dick in his bulge. He threw back his parka hood and his hair was dyed a yellow blond. He was a teenager, his face covered in acne. A long feathered roach clip dangled from his ear, rested on the shoulder of his jacket. He was so skinny.
“You got it wrong,” James said, nodding at me to follow him.
“Not like you to turn down an offer.” The guy spoke as if he was chewing gum.
“I’m not workin’,” James said.
The guy expelled a burst of air in a short, sharp hiss. “You’re getting too old for this. They want fresh meat.”
“Come on,” James urged, grabbing me by the hood and spinning me around.
The guy called out, “Leaving them all for me?” as we began to walk south to Dundas Street.
I sat in the streetcar seat in front of James, who said nothing. I opened the window and stuck my face outside, like a dog, breathing in the air and cooling my head. We were heading west, toward Spadina, and James didn’t have any nails left to chew.
“It doesn’t mean anything,” James finally said. I pressed my forehead to the window the way my mother did when she sat on the worm-picker. “I was seven when my mother left.” His elbows stretched across the seat over my shoulder. He leaned in. I shifted away. “She said she was going to find my father, bring him back home. I was so excited. Just thinking about it, those words, my father. I waited. Never had a family like yours. My grandfather was the only other person to take care of me. He hadn’t wanted my mother to go. He had said that’s how he lost his wife, to the flash of the big city.” I leaned my head against the streetcar window. “I kept thinking of how my mother’d come home with her arms full of toys and my father, who I had never met, would walk in behind her. It’s what kept me going, you know? I practised my reading so I would impress my father when he came home. I was ten, I think, when I realized they would never come.” I heard him swallow his spit. I couldn’t bear to look at him and I was sure he wouldn’t continue if I did.
“My grandfather was a crazy bastard sober, turned devil with a bit of drink. He bought this dog, didn’t allow me to give it a name. ‘Go feed, Dog!’ he’d yell, which meant throwing scraps at the thing because it was chained to the tree all day long.” James stopped. The streetcar swept along Dundas Street, past Chinatown. There wouldn’t be much time for James to finish his story.
“One day—I was fifteen—I came home and before I could even make my way through the front door, he tackled me, wrapped a chain around my ankles. It happened so fast. He dragged me through the snow and tied the chain to that same tree out back.” We had stopped at Kensington Market and the Project, the buildings all uniform like piled bricks. “What the fuck is he doing? It kept going on in my head like a skipped record. What the fuck is he doing? Then I saw him come from the front of the house. That beast of a dog was pulling him forward. ‘Make a man of you yet, boy, not a fuckin’ crybaby.’ ”
I saw James’s reflection in the window. He was someplace else.
“He let go of Dog. I covered my face, but he went at my head, tore at my thigh. I kicked. Then I punched. ‘You got to fight dirty if you ever gonna make something of yourself, boy.’ I reached for its collar, held its head in the snow. Get it off! That’s when it got loose, lunged at me and dug into my face. ‘Fight back! Because if you don’t, the world’s gonna swallow you up and spit you out.’ The dog was yanked back, clear off its paws. ‘Get him, you little fucker!’ ” James said, softly.
“BANG!” James jumped off his seat as he said it. I jumped with him. Even the streetcar driver looked back at us. “My grandfather shot into the air. Slung the rifle over his shoulder and went back into the house with his dog. Bastard.”
I traced the pink scar along his jaw with my eyes. “I tied a rag around my head. It kept the blood in check and held the skin in place.”
“That same night I set a trap, one of those nasty things that look like the jaws of a shark, with all those teeth. I hooked some meat on it and dragged it close enough to the barking dog. He went for the meat and the trap snapped shut.” James clapped the air for added effect. “Clear took its fuckin’ head off.”
“And your grandfather?” I asked, lowering my voice. The streetcar was in front of Sanderson Library. I reached up and rang the bell.
“He was there. He could hardly stand. He crouched in the snow and patted the dog’s head. Its body was five feet away. He stood up, old bastard. Started clapping—loud and slow. Then he laughed. Said, ‘I’m the only family you got, boy.’ And that’s when I ran as fast as I could, straight at the miserable geezer. I rammed into him so hard he fell backwards, right into the tree and the rusted nail that waited for him.”
James looked at me. I nodded as though I understood his pain, even though I didn’t. All I felt was an emptiness in my stomach.
“When I left that night, the snow had almost completely covered him. Frosty the fuckin’ Snowman. But the old bastard sat crouched against the tree, giggling. He was fuckin’ demented.”
James raised his knees and hugged them, drew his sleeve across his nose, then into his mouth. “Never told anyone before.” He hugged his legs tighter and looked out the streetcar window. “It’s our stop,” he said.