登陆注册
10442100000009

第9章 Lucas McCallum

AS I'M DRIVING BACK TO SCHOOL FROM THE LIQUOR store, I keep thinking about this TV show I used to watch in New York, The Confessor. The title character, the host, is a dude called Antoine Abbotson, who's short and smiley and wears a navy blue suit. Each show, he brings in three people who each have a secret. The idea is, the Confessor bids up the price to get them to confess that secret on live TV. But if he hits a certain dollar threshold—a concealed number somewhere under $50,000—the contestant walks away empty-handed. Sometimes, though, the people on that show make bank. One woman got paid $47,000 to explain to her husband that the front room in their house smelled awful because she'd pooped into their upright piano while sleepwalking, couldn't reach down far enough to extract the resulting poop after the fact, and never had the heart to tell anyone.

It's strange, watching that show, seeing how people price their secrets. My family hangs their eccentricities around their necks when they walk out the door every day. There's Uncle Jeremy, who won a trophy for having the longest mustache in New York State. There's my cousin Cabret, who dropped out of college to start her own private-investigation service. And you can't forget Great-Grandma Louise, who at age ninety-one lives alone in a cabin in the Catskills and still checks her traps every morning for dead animals.

My family values honesty for a couple of reasons: first, the Ten Commandments say, "Thou shalt not bear false witness"; and second, my family is full of givers. Givers palm off their secrets with every handshake; they lay it all bare.

Me? I keep one secret from my parents. It's boring, and everyone at school knows it: I sell drugs. Not hard drugs, just weed and booze, but I'm not about to tell my mom and dad. They think my money is leftover from sweeping aisles down at Brent Hardware, where I work over the summers.

It'd break their hearts if I ever told them, but as selfless as they are, what they give me never feels like enough. I always want more, and Paloma only makes it worse. This place seemed unreal when I got here freshman year: a dollhouse town, unimaginably small, and it's shrunk since then. I've met everyone. I've been everywhere. There's nothing left to collect now, except profits from deals. It gets depressing, sometimes.

As I turn into the junior lot, the cases of beer make a chorus of metallic clinks in the back of my truck. Then a scuffed-up Camry looms out of nowhere, its horn blaring. My foot jerks toward the brake pedal. Too late.

The Camry smacks into my front bumper, and I lurch forward. The sound isn't so much a crash as a thump. "Car thump" doesn't sound as dramatic as "car crash." I feel sort of gypped.

In the sudden stillness, I take inventory of my body, scribbling a mental list across my mind's eye:

? Icy skin.

? Pulse in strange places—earlobes, forearms?

? No pain.

I'm in one piece, at least, and I have something to cross off my "Never Have I Ever" list.

The wounded Camry pulls into a spot, and I park beside it, bolting out to check the damage. My truck door squeals as I swing it shut.

The Camry came out unscathed, except for a tiny dent under one headlight. My pickup, on the other hand, looks as if it got into a fight with a Transformer. The Camry must've hit the last thing keeping my front bumper attached. Now it dangles askew, a lopsided leer.

My jaw tightens, and I bury one hand in my hair. Look at me, worrying over a broken, mud-encrusted pickup. What would my middle-school friends think?

It takes a minute to shake the thought. First of all, if everything goes according to plan, I'll have saved up enough for a new car, a nice one, before graduation. Second of all, I'm out of touch with everyone from the Pinnacle School, so their opinions don't matter.

Still, I can't get rid of the complex that place gave me.

My middle school was a private academy in Brooklyn's richest neighborhood. I was a scholarship kid, the poorest person there by a margin so huge, it was humiliating. Everything about me stood out, from my haircut to my clothes to my commute. An hour's trip separated our apartment in Coney Island from Pinnacle's cushy spot in Brooklyn Heights, and I did homework on the Q, wedged into a corner of the train car beside my mother.

Pinnacle kids never seemed to think about money, but around them, it was all I saw. Every break, my Instagram and Facebook feeds flooded: photos of spring trips to the Maldives, skiing trips to Aspen, and summer homes in Europe. They wore their wealth effortlessly. The preppier crowd had polo players and Golden Fleece logos on their pastel clothes. The "alternative" kids wore baggy woolen tops and artfully shredded leggings, but it was the same old story of unspeakable amounts of money, just translated into a different language.

I don't miss that place. I still feel embarrassed about my family because of it. I still worry how we look to people, even here in Paloma, where we're now comfortably lower-middle class.

"Lucas, you okay?"

I look up from my bumper. The sight of a familiar face floods me with relief—I've dealt to Matt Jackson since I started freshman year.

I nod at Matt. "You good?"

"Yeah. You wanna call the cops?"

"Cops." I glance at my truck bed. "Right."

Matt eyes the tarp that covers the cases. "We don't have to. My car's fine, so if you're okay driving around with your bumper half off, be my guest."

"Thanks, dude. Appreciate it."

Matt's head bobs. The kid is low-key cool, but getting him to say much is tough. He's also hot, in a my-type-of-way, but I've gotten good at ignoring when guys are hot, since everyone at this school is so aggressively heterosexual.

According to an article I read, three or four percent of people are gay, lesbian, or bi. Wherever they dredged up that statistic, it wasn't Paloma High School. Twelve hundred kids, and I haven't met a single other queer person. Definitely no Gay-Straight Alliance Club here.

Sometimes I feel like we should have a club for all minority populations, since this place has all the ethnic diversity of your average mayonnaise jar. The culture shock was real at first, moving here, where everyone's the same shade of white and the same subgenre of Methodist.

Matt opens his back door and leans into his car, his shoulder blades pitching tents in the back of his hoodie. His voice is muffled as he rummages through the mess in his backseat. "Hey, are you selling today?"

"Yeah, hit me up after school."

"Sweet." He shoulders his backpack and shuts the door. "It's a date."

Something goes still in the center of my chest. I stay quiet as Matt pulls a beanie over his head. His eyes are light brown and guarded, and I can't help but wonder.

A date?

An impulse hits me. Maybe it's the adrenaline still zipping over my skin, or maybe it's the smell of cold air conjuring the feeling of someone's hand in mine. Winter of eighth grade was the first time I ever held a guy's hand, and chilly afternoons remind me of it every so often: Caleb's warm, uncertain grip.

"Hey, Matt," I say. "You maybe want to get coffee sometime? Or dinner or something?"

His expression freezes. If it were a computer screen, it would read: 404 error. Unable to process request. "I … what?" he says.

Bad guess. Crap. Say something, Lucas.

"Nothing, never mind," I blurt out. The least convincing three words ever spoken.

Matt, of course, because he is not a moron, doesn't buy it for a second. He stares at me as if I'm a poisonous snake that's tried to strike up friendly conversation. "Weren't you straight, like, six months ago?"

A gust of wind scurries through the parking lot. I watch it toy with the heavy leather laces of my Sperry Top-Siders. I shouldn't have said anything.

Nobody cared at Pinnacle, home to yuppie liberals galore. My friend Alicia used to kiss her girlfriend in the stairwell, and they were only thirteen, and nobody cared. Paloma High, though, is different. On the swim team, if you make a one-word complaint about a workout, you get told to "suck it up, fag." After a hard test, people whine, "That was gay as shit." And when my teammates compliment one another, they follow up with "no homo." (They do this every time, as if people might've forgotten from the last time that they're not a homo.) I've never seen anyone getting crucified for actually being queer, but that's just one step up from, "Suck it up, fag." So I've stayed quiet.

I should say "no homo," pretend I was kidding, but I can't get the words out. They taste bitter sitting on my tongue.

Matt still looks startled. "I thought you dated that Claire chick forever."

"I did."

"So?" he says.

I shrug. "So … what?"

"So how does that work if you're gay?"

"I'm not gay."

He looks baffled. "You just asked me out, dude."

"Yeah, well, I'm not gay. It's—"

The warning bell blares, saving me the explanation. Matt hoists his backpack higher on his shoulder and gives up. "Okay, whatever. After school? Weed? We good?"

"Sure," I say. "And, um, Matt?"

"What?"

"Would you … don't say anything, all right?"

He shrugs. "Yeah, no."

He walks off, leaving me uneasy but relieved to see him go. I hate the What is a pansexual? conversation. It means explaining the same thing I've explained so many times before to every cousin, aunt, and uncle in our address book. I'll come out a million times before I'm dead, and I'm already bored of it.

To be fair, though, the What is a pansexual? conversation is a million times better than the That doesn't sound real conversation. Uncle Jeremy still stands by his claim that my sexuality is imaginary. Nice to know I don't exist.

Mostly, though, I'm lucky in the family department, since my parents are the type of Christians who don't stick too close to Leviticus. My dad still wants me to settle down with a girl, but he's stopped saying it out loud, at least.

The seed of the secret being out in the Paloma world worries me. I want to snatch it back, put it deep in my pocket. Never talk about it again.

Making sure the lot's empty, I transfer a half-dozen cases of Miller to Dan Silverstein's SUV, grab my cash from the trunk, and head out. Thumbing through the thin leaves of twenties, loving the smell and feel of them, I cross the green at a jog. It's ridiculous, the profits I make, with a couple of extra dollars per case as commission. People always want the same stuff: beer that's basically sugar water and enough weed to sedate a bull elephant.

The only vaguely difficult part of this was getting hooked up in the first place. For the liquor, I called in a favor from back in New York to get a fake ID sent to me here, since fakes in town are way overpriced and way unconvincing. Now, with my magic piece of plastic, my secret identity is local superhero Anderson Lewitt, a twenty-two-year-old from Vermont who always buys in bulk.

I got lucky with the weed. The guy who used to deal to our school moved away six months into my freshman year, and I networked my way into replacing him. My supplier is a morbidly obese thirty-six-year-old named Phil who prefers to go by "Teezy." He has never explained this to me.

The bell rings. "Crap," I mutter, stowing my wallet deep in my pocket. I take the last bit of the green at a run, shoulder through the door, and skid into the Spanish room. Se?or Muniz-Alonso gives me a hawklike glare, and I respond with a sheepish grin, scurrying to my table.

"Luciano … tarde," Muniz-Alonso says, like a death sentence. "Y fuiste tarde ayer también. ?Ten cuidado! No quiero darte una detención …"

I try to translate the words, but they slip away the second he says them. "Sorry," I say, sitting down.

"En espa?ol, por favor."

"Uh," I say. "Lo siento."

Muniz-Alonso goes back to writing irregular conjugations on the board, and I relax.

"Yeah, Luke, ten cuidado." My tablemate, Herman, elbows me. I elbow him back, grinning. Herman swims backstroke, and of course, the second he joined the team, people nicknamed him Merman. He has such long, thick hair that some people call him Mermaid instead, but I don't know. I'm into the idea of mer-dudes drifting through the ocean, straggly hair wafting down to their waists.

Muniz-Alonso starts another conjugation chart. I wait for him to finish, stretching my arms out. Herman eyes my wrist. "Yo," he says, "nice watch."

"Thanks," I say. Before I can restrain myself, the brand slips out. "Movado."

He looks mystified. "Huh?"

I clear my throat. "Knockoff," I lie.

"Oh. Thought you were conjugating on me there."

I grin, rubbing my thumb across the watch face. I don't mention the price tag: most of August's profits. I want to regret spending nearly a thousand dollars on a watch—I could be saving the money for my car fund or, hell, helping my parents with the bills—but I can't regret it, as much as I try. With something this valuable wrapped around my wrist, I get a thrill every time I glance down. I'm already thinking of my next buy, Gucci or Citizen, stacked up by the dozens in my online cart.

Muniz-Alonso steps back, revealing the conjugation charts. Sounds of copying break the air, pencils scratching on notebooks, a few fingertips tapping laptop keys. I take my pencil from behind my ear. I bought myself a new laptop last Christmas, but when it comes to notes, the feel of writing satisfies me more.

"Yo, Mer," I say quietly, starting to copy. "Anything happening tomorrow night?"

"Not much. I heard some of the team's doing a surprise birthday party for Layna."

"Probably at Bailey's house, huh? You think they'd mind if I showed?"

"I don't think it's open, man." Herman copies a conjugation chart from the board, brushing his hair out of his face.

"So what else's going on?" I ask.

He lets out a laugh. "You'd know better than me."

"Okay, so nothing," I say, scribbling down tendré, tendrás, tendrá. "Know what? I'm gonna get some of the guys together. Nothing worse than a quiet Friday night."

"Dad, come onnn," Herman says, pitching his voice up to a whine. "Give the team bonding a rest."

I chuckle. They can rest when I'm dead. When you move every few years, you live with shallow roots. I've been getting ripped up all my life, and I'm done with it. Time's accelerating. I'm not aiming to end up with nobody and nothing.

Teenage years are the best years of our lives. They keep saying that. I don't know, though. I keep grasping for people, hunting for them. I take people and I write them down, and I think about the ones I want to keep. And sometimes I find people, and I wonder—I don't know. I wonder, are these really the best people we're going to be?

同类推荐
  • Birdman

    Birdman

    Now in Grove Press paperback for the first time, Birdman showcases Hayder at her spine-tingling best as beloved series character Jack Caffery tracks down a terrifying serial wkkk.net his first case as lead investigator with London's crack murder squad, Detective Inspector Jack Caffery is called on to investigate the murder of a young woman whose body has been discovered near the Millennium Dome in Greenwich, south-east London. Brutalized, mutilated beyond recognition, the victim is soon joined by four others discovered in the same areaall female and all ritualistically murdered. And when the post-mortem examination reveals a gruesome signature connecting the victims, Caffery realizes exactly what he's dealing witha dangerous serial killer.
  • The Homecoming

    The Homecoming

    Years after the events of Spencer's Mountain, Clay Spencer—Clay-Boy's father—fails to return home on Christmas Eve. Leaving his worried family to keep watch at the homestead, Clay-Boy takes to the snowy Virginia hills in search of his father. Along the way, he meets an irate deer, a threatening county sheriff, a congregation of African-American churchgoers, and two elderly women who happen to be bootleggers. The story of Clay-Boy's search for his father is told with warmth and intensity.Along with its prequel, Spencer's Mountain, The Homecoming was the inspiration for the popular television show The Waltons, which starred Richard Thomas, Andrew Duggan, and Patricia Neal, and ran for nine years between 1972 and 1981. Over fifty years after its publication, this novel still has the power to move and inspire.
  • Useless Bay

    Useless Bay

    On Whidbey Island, the Gray quintuplets are the stuff of legend. Pixie and her brothers have always been bigger and blonder than their neighbors, as if they were birthed from the island itself. Together, they serve as an unofficial search-and-rescue team for the island, saving tourists and locals alike from the forces of wind and sea. But, when a young boy goes missing, the mysteries start to pile up. While searching for him, they find his mother's dead body instead —and realize that something sinister is in their midst. Edgar-nominated author M. J. Beaufrand has crafted another atmospheric thriller with a touch of magical realism that fans of mystery and true crime will devour.
  • The Cure for Dreaming

    The Cure for Dreaming

    Winters breathes new life into history once again with an atmospheric, vividly real story that includes archival photos and art from the period. Olivia Mead is a headstrong, independent girl -a suffragist -in an age that prefers its females to be docile. It's 1900 in Oregon, and Olivia's father, concerned that she's headed for trouble, convinces a stage mesmerist to try to hypnotize the rebellion out of her. But the hypnotist, an intriguing young man named Henri Reverie, gives her a terrible gift instead: she's able to see people's true natures, manifesting as visions of darkness and goodness, while also unable to speak her true thoughts out loud. These supernatural challenges only make Olivia more determined to speak her mind, and so she's drawn into a dangerous relationship with the hypnotist and his mysterious motives, all while secretly fighting for the rights of women.
  • The Peculiars

    The Peculiars

    This dark and thrilling adventure, with an unforgettable heroine, will captivate fans of steampunk, fantasy, and romance. On her 18th birthday, Lena Mattacascar decides to search for her father, who disappeared into the northern wilderness of Scree when Lena was young. Scree is inhabited by Peculiars, people whose unusual characteristics make them unacceptable to modern society. Lena wonders if her father is the source of her own extraordinary characteristics and if she, too, is Peculiar. On the train she meets a young librarian, Jimson Quiggley, who is traveling to a town on the edge of Scree to work in the home and library of the inventor Mr. Beasley. The train is stopped by men being chased by the handsome young marshal Thomas Saltre. When Saltre learns who Lena's father is, he convinces her to spy on Mr. Beasley and the strange folk who disappear into his home, Zephyr House. A daring escape in an aerocopter leads Lena into the wilds of Scree to confront her deepest fears.
热门推荐
  • 女校之噬梦诡歌

    女校之噬梦诡歌

    四年前,一场招灵游戏风靡校园,却为一所大学招来了一场场的诡异事件;四年后,几个新生卷入其中,一次鬼楼的历险,一封神秘的来信,究竟把他们引到何方?而他们最终又能否解开这一团团的迷雾,找到最后的真相?
  • 技高一筹(开启青少年智慧故事)

    技高一筹(开启青少年智慧故事)

    《技高一筹》用脍炙人口的智慧小故事来教育青少年,不仅简单实用,而且效果可喜。通过此书希望让孩子们从生动有趣的故事中汲取智慧的养分。本书在生动有趣的小故事里让你甩掉丝丝烦恼,拨开困惑茫然的迷雾,在为人处世上都技高一筹,收获茫茫人生的各种智慧。
  • 诸天轨迹

    诸天轨迹

    叶枫身上多了个单人无限冒险终端,这里可以买到无数有趣的东西,可以学会无数有趣的能力,于是他去了警匪都市与许正阳、陈家驹、袁浩云激斗,在江湖中与风云煮酒,在《仙剑》、《蜀山》中御剑长空,偶尔也帮着清扫清扫丧尸,或者帮终结者对付对付天网……
  • 中国企业员工最容易犯的101个错误

    中国企业员工最容易犯的101个错误

    成功的经验我们要学习,错误的教训也同样要借鉴。错误是不可避免的人生经历,从别人的错误中分析原冈、汲取教训是人生的一笔财富。同理,只有善于分析各种各样的失败案例,去寻找其中深层次的原因,才能避免自己遭遇同样的失败。
  • 婚劫

    婚劫

    玩世不恭的社会混混爱上纯洁女大学生,并为了真爱决心改变生活态度。可惜,就在他拿出真心的时候,女大学生却翩然离去····
  • 绝命追杀

    绝命追杀

    这是一部纪实文学作品,以翔实的资料介绍了意大利政府和警方剿灭意大利黑手党的艰难过程。本书生动地介绍了意大利黑手党起源、发展和派系以及犯罪行为,重点描写了警方为了保护国家利益和公民安全不惜一切代价同犯罪做斗争的决心和行动。?意大利黑手党,是世界上最大的犯罪组织之一,百年来它无恶不作,将罪恶之手伸向各个领域,企图超越正义与人民。但光明必将战胜黑暗,在政府与警方的不懈努力与坚持打击下,意大利黑手党已经成为逝去的传说……
  • FBI自控修炼学

    FBI自控修炼学

    本书不是专业分析FBI的科学报告,也不是“爆料”FBI内幕的新闻集萃,而是一本以FBI案例为构架进行探讨的休闲性读物,从身体自控、思维自控、语言自控、情绪自控等方面入手,让人们了解FBI自控力修炼的方方面面,起到修习心态、调控情绪、塑造能力、思考人生的作用。
  • 天荒至尊

    天荒至尊

    浩瀚神洲,万族林立,强者遨游于九天之上,弱者只能沦为踏石。最强战体逐一显世,群雄逐鹿,诸圣争霸,谁能高坐九天,俯世间?一个少年自上古圣地走出,强势崛起,横扫无敌,在谈笑之间弑神魔,于回眸之间越巅峰,翻手之间镇诸天。登天路,踏歌行,弹指弑仙!——罗陨
  • 优秀员工要有好心态好方法好素养

    优秀员工要有好心态好方法好素养

    全球500强企业奉为圭臬的理念和价值观,是为你造就优秀员工的第一思想准则和行为指南。帮助员工纵横职场,实现员工职业梦想;提升员工自身素质,成就员工卓越人生。心态决定状态,方法决定效果,素养改变命运。良好的心态+有效的方法+一流的素养=优秀员工。
  • 邪龙都市

    邪龙都市

    他是一代邪帝,但却做了杀手,因为一场意外而重回都市,为了复活自己心底的女人,同时又为了解开心中的诸多疑惑,他最终选择走上了逆天修魔之路,医道圣手、铁血柔情、身伴黑龙、脚踏苍穹。传承……武学……医术……阵法……无所不精、无所不通!用着他自己的独特方式守护着心中的净土,华夏!