City on Fire

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City on Fire Page 8

by Garth Risk Hallberg


  “Which do you want me to do?” It just slipped out, really, and was sincerely meant: Charlie was ready to do whatever was expected of him. But it sounded, even to his own ears, like smart-assery. Nicky Chaos became intensely still, as if trying to reach some decision.

  “Somebody get this guy a beer,” he said finally, “I kind of love this kid”—though the person to whom he was talking appeared to be Charlie.

  Someone from out in the hallway set a cold beer on Charlie’s shoulder. The green-haired black guy, the guitarist. Charlie tried not to let his hands shake, but the beer rose away from him at exactly the same speed as he reached for it, recalling those kids on the LIRR. Then it stopped. His fingers closed, grateful, around the can.

  When he looked back at the couch, S.G. appeared to have conked out with her head on a cushion. The singer looked down at her like she was money someone had dumped in his lap. “So how do you know our friend here, Charlie?”

  Charlie blushed. “We just met.”

  “Well, make sure to wear about three condoms if you plan on touching her,” the guitarist said dryly behind him.

  “Hey. That’s my old lady you’re talking about, Tremens,” said another voice from the hall. It was an impossibly tall skinhead with safety pins through his eyebrows and both ears and a face like he’d sucked a lemon. Yep: Solomon Grungy, with whom Charlie had had the distinct displeasure that one other time, last Fourth of July. He’d been intimidating then, but seemed now like a watered-down Nicky Chaos. Similarly brawny, but larger and paler and less hairy. And less smart.

  “Yeah, well, you’d better keep her away from Charlie here. I think she was about to give him a hummer,” Tremens said.

  Charlie looked at the wall while Sol inspected him. Sniffed. “I know you. You’re Sam’s little lapdog, from the summer. You couldn’t get head from a cabbage.”

  Tremens laughed, but Nicky Chaos said, in a steely voice, to leave Charlie alone.

  “Yeah, well, tell him to stay away from my girl,” Sol said. Then he turned and stalked away, grumbling about the soundboard.

  “Sounds like someone’s got the property disease again,” Nicky told the girl, who had opened her eyes at something someone had said. “It’s counterrevolutionary. Preposthuman. You’ll have to work on him.” Then, to Charlie: “Hey, were you planning to drink that?”

  Charlie gulped down half of the beer, aware that at any minute they could tire of him and ask him to leave, and then he’d no longer be fucking hanging out with Ex Whatever. The drummer, Big Mike, had now wandered in, along with the new organ player, each nodding at Charlie as if they’d been expecting to find him here. The pop-tops of Rheingolds exhaled contentedly, and another cold one found its way into his hand. He wondered where they were coming from: a fridge, a cooler, some inexhaustible aluminum tree sprouting deep in the warren of wonders that was “backstage.”

  Listening to them talk about who was in the audience reminded him that this was their first real performance. That gallery fag Bruno was out there, did you see him? And Bullet’s Angels, scary dudes, man, scary dudes. Plus the dissertationists, your Nietzsche Brigade. But has anyone seen Billy? Little bastard is probably too … Hey.… All the while, the girl on the sofa, sitting up again, gazed at Charlie. “So you know Sam,” she said. “You never told me that.”

  “Yeah, we’re like best friends.”

  Nicky seemed to grow interested, though Charlie had the feeling he was trying to hide it. “Sam Cicciaro? She here with you?”

  “Well, she was, sort of, but she had to run uptown to take care of something. Hey, do you guys know where the 72nd Street IND is? I’m supposed to meet her up there if she doesn’t show soon,” he said, importantly. “I’d hate to miss the second set, but …”

  S.G. got to her feet. “Speaking of which, let me go talk Sol down from the ledge before he fucks up your mix. Come on, D.T. You’ll be too fucked up to play.” Charlie made to follow her and the guitarist until she stopped him. “Sol can get pretty jealous. Probably not the best idea he sees you with me.” Laughter throbbed in the close chamber of the room.

  “No, I just—” Except she’d left him behind. He wanted to explain to the newcomers, She was decent to me, but instead found himself saying, “She was going to give me a …”

  Nicky Chaos laughed, and this was enough to drown out the little voice of self-hatred. “That’s good, man.”

  Someone else said, “Oh, man. Charlie’s just a baby.”

  “He needs a handle, though.”

  “A handle?”

  “Yeah. Like your lady friend there. How about Backstage Charlie?”

  “Charlie Boy, Charlie Baby,” Nicky said. “Charlemagne. Don’t Squeeze the Charmin.”

  “Or Charlie Blowjob. Chuck Fellatio.”

  Charlie couldn’t see what was so funny, or whether they were laughing with him, at him, on him … Nicky Chaos’s hand on his shoulder was reassuring. “Come on, Char-man Mao. I want to show you something.”

  Pretending not to see him wink, Charlie let himself be led deeper into the bowels of the club. There was no beer tree—just ceilings getting lower and lower, naked bulbs and dangling flypaper. “Watch your step,” the singer said. All kinds of crap crunched underfoot: wires, chicken bones, bits of shadowy brick. Charlie was getting nervous again. It was, what was the word, sepulchral. Catacomb-y. They stepped over the threshold of a tiled and doorless bathroom. “We’ve still got to play another set,” Nicky Chaos said. “You know what that means?” He drew a bit of plastic from his pocket. “Zoom zoom.”

  That summer, with Sam, Charlie had had a clear line in his mind, like the line on a strip of litmus paper, separating their dalliances with controlled substances from the hard stuff. Hazel liquids, grayish mushrooms, bright red canisters of unshaken Reddi-wip, milky blue spansules of painkillers that made his mouth water: all fair game (except the thin green confetti of Washington Square ditch-weed, which he couldn’t smoke on account of his asthma). But they swore off anything white. He’d seen Panic in Needle Park; that shit ruined lives. Then again, he’d never imagined himself here, in the sub-subbasement of a former bank, alone with a man who at any minute would ask him to cement their friendship. It was as if that thumb-sized glassine pouch contained not ordinary drugs, but some magic substance, a chalk-white eye of newt or the powdered tusk of a narwhal.

  The spell had overtaken Nicky Chaos, too. His expansive gestures turned all business as he wrenched tight the dripping faucet, as he took off his tee-shirt, as he used it to wipe any moisture from the industrial sink. With all those tattoos on his superhero physique, he was like the Visible Man, but he seemed utterly unselfconscious—unaware even that there was anyone with him. Charlie could already see that he would go onstage like this, swept up in the moment, half-naked, and that his disregard for interpersonal niceties would be part of the power he exerted. His face was tight with concentration and yet somehow also vacant as he pinched open the slit of the plastic pocket and used an index finger to tip a little white onto the sink’s steel lip. A switchblade came out of his back pocket, and with the dull side he combed the powder into two distinct middens, one large, one small, the brightest things in the room. The knife clattered down into the sink, but was still open and in plain view when he turned to Charlie like a newly rich man showing off his mansion to poor relations. “You done coke before?” The muddy tile amplified Charlie’s cough into a small grenade. Music throbbed distantly overhead.

  He lied. “Sure, yeah, one time.”

  “Well, have at, then.”

  A vision of himself toothless and sleeping in a cardboard box flared within Charlie, but there was also something deeply attractive at work, the glamour of a long slow dive into an empty pool, and the faces of all the people who’d let him down looking on, regretting their powerlessness to stop him. The face of Mom. The face of Sam. “Oh, you can go first.”

  “Hospitality, hombre. Guests before hosts.”

  Charlie took a breath and bent down to l
evel his head with the sink. He thought you put a finger over each nostril, and then a single sniff did it. But someone else was watching from the doorway behind him.

  “Give the kid a break, Nicholas.”

  It was a smallish man with a motorcycle jacket and a mass of black hair and a record sleeve clasped weirdly under one arm. The right side of his face was puffy, the eye swollen a deep purple, which was why it took Charlie a minute to recognize that this was the great Billy Three-Sticks.

  “Jesus, what happened to you?” Nicky said, but he’d straightened up radically, at attention.

  “Guy walks into a bar.”

  “I mean, I knew you were whipped, but not like literally … That even apply? Whipped?”

  “Nothing was going to stop me from checking out your latest antics.”

  “You’re awful generous with your time,” said Nicky, with some heat.

  “Pure selfishness. I had to make sure you weren’t ruining my good name.”

  “You wouldn’t let us use your good name, remember? But you’ll be glad to know the first set was fucking amazing. Go on, tell him.” Nicky nudged Charlie, but Billy Three-Sticks was unconvinced.

  “Who’s your friend here, Nicky? Do you really want to play corruptor of youth? Hey, if you know what’s good for you, kid, you should keep clear of these fuckups.”

  “He does this all the time, he says. And you’re one to talk.”

  “Besides,” Billy continued, “it seems like you’d want your wits about you, Nicky. From what I hear, you’re planning to go out in a real blaze of glory. Crude but effective, right?”

  Nicky froze. It was like all the air had been sucked from the space between them. “Who told you that?”

  “What do you mean, who told me? The ball drops in half an hour, and Bullet said you got a bunch of fireworks to shoot off at the end of the set. Some kind of big-ass bang.”

  Even as he relaxed, Nicky’s armor seemed dented. “You know, Billy, we could still try to make the band thing work. It’s never too late to change.”

  “Honestly, I’m just relieved to see Ex Nihilo’s for real; I had gotten a little suspicious it was some kind of ruse. Which reminds me … I brought along a belated Christmas gift.” Billy held out the record he’d been carrying. “Think of it as a peace offering of sorts. Deep stuff, but if you listen carefully, there’s a message.”

  Charlie had an obscure impulse to tell Billy Three-Sticks not to give up or over so easily, but he kept his mouth shut, because whatever was being worked out here, it wasn’t about him. And Sam would have died if she’d known she was missing this meeting of the minds, Ex Post Facto, Ex Nihilo. Then he remembered: Quarter to twelve … Sam! He could see her, waiting by the subway exit in the slanting snow, looking left and right, alone. The little snowdrift before him gave a last, potent dazzle, but not even the promise of Nicky’s fireworks could match the purity of Charlie’s vision, which was the purity of dreams. “I just remembered,” he said. “I’ve got to go.” He pushed past the man in the doorway, whom a minute earlier he wouldn’t have dared to touch, but who seemed diminished by whatever he’d just ceded to his replacement. Only out in the corridor did Charlie look back, so that the last thing he remembered seeing before forging on through the maze of the basement and up the stairs was the two men, one burly and one small, inclined almost Talmudically over the sink, murmuring over what it contained.

  8

  THE BENCH HAD ALREADY ALL BUT DISAPPEARED in the first five or ten minutes, its bottle-green slats gone white to match the white drifted underneath. Now, as the wind kicked up, tufts of her hood’s lining blew into her mouth, but she hardly noticed them, or the wind, or the snow, or even the fact that Charlie hadn’t shown—because he would show eventually, was the beauty and the tragedy of Charlie. Instead, her attention was on the fleecy globes of light out front of the apartment house down the street, and on the schmancy vestibule door. Every time it opened, she leaned forward a little … but it would only be some society couple lurching out through the storm, toward a gleaming black towncar that was even then, as if by secret prearrangement, gliding to the curb. Sam finished her cigarette and drew her coat tighter and squinted through a wreath of smoke. She’d made a resolution: tomorrow she would stop smoking, stop waking up with the wheezy pain in her lungs, stop forking over five bucks a week to evil multinationals. One last little cylinder of death remained, though, rolling around in its pack. She wondered how long she had left.

  Making resolutions had been something she used to do with her mother. New Year’s was the one time of the year when Mom would bypass the bulgur wheat and wheat germ at the store in favor of the sweets Sam craved, and then they’d sit up together on the couch, dunking pizzelle in hot chocolate until sugar shock set in. Sam had been fat then. Mom had most likely been stoned. And what about Dad, where had he been? Work, probably. New Year’s was the second-biggest night of the year for fireworkers, and he hadn’t yet lost the contract to handle all the city’s displays, or settled into beery automythology with the magazine reporter who would become his Boswell. Or Groskoph, as the case may be. The television had been half commercials, but Mom left it on. Every shot of Guy Lombardo with his bow tie and his microphone the size of a seal club brought them closer to the big moment. There was a Timex-sponsored clock in the lower right corner of the screen, and at T-minus thirty minutes, Mom would go get last year’s resolutions, which had gradually been forgotten among the florilegia magnetized to the fridge. Sam could still remember how her mom smelled as she returned to the couch, cocoa powder and marshmallow-melt, yes, but also an intricate woodland thing that spoke of California, from which she’d so improbably come.

  What you did was, you read your resolutions out loud and put a check by the ones you’d managed to keep. The ones you’d broken became a starting point for your new list. Fifty percent was considered pretty good, unlike at school. As she looked back now, though, several things struck Sam. The first was that Mom had already harbored yearnings she must not have realized were legible there, in the resolutions that had been hanging in plain sight for the last 364 days, if only Dad would have thought to look. The second was the guilty way Mom had glanced at the streaks of powdered sugar on her daughter’s Dacron thighs as Sam read aloud her previous vow to lose twenty pounds. And finally—now that she had ten years of data on the two of them and an additional five on her own (for Sam was a manic documentarian, and had squirreled away all the lists)—there was this: how little difference it made. In the end, like every human project, these plans that on December 31 burned so brightly in the forebrain would gutter and come to grief. It was remarkable how many of her own resolutions Sam would forget in the course of the year. They would return to her at its end like sealed messages, bottles set adrift by some other self on the far shore of a wide sea.

  For example, after swearing not to see Keith again (it was at the very top of her ’77 list) she found herself waiting for him. The glass door was like the shutter of a Coleman lantern: the square of yellow light on the sidewalk shone brighter when it was open, but this time it was only a doorman in a long coat and epaulets, ducking out for a smoke. As if in sympathy, and before she could stop herself, she lit her own last cigarette and watched the lonely figure, his face the color of a pecan shell, pace back and forth in a cloud of his own breath. Her nose-ring stung her nose. It was hard not to crumple the cigarette pack now that her fingers had lost feeling, but she was not—was not—cold. This had been a late addendum to her list: that just for the night, for the sake of feeling brave enough to do what she’d come here to do, she would not worry about the time or the temperature. The stubbornest person on earth, her father called her. He didn’t know the half. With those she loved—with Charlie, or with Dad himself—she could be, by her own standards, accommodating. She was most implacably stubborn when her opponent was herself. Because how many of her resolutions were really prohibitions? I will not x; I shall not y. She’d watched her mother closely, in those long-ago times when
she’d been too little to know exactly what kinds of things one should promise oneself. She’d copied the syntax of Mom’s list, negation for negation, and had felt a surge of closeness every time Mom said, “Hey, that’s a good one.” Marrying Dad had itself been a kind of negation. The problem with Sam was that, right up to the deadline, midnight or whatever date she’d set for herself to give something up, she would double her indulgence, as if stockpiling. She’d given up sweets for Lent one year, and had made herself sick on Pez the night before Ash Wednesday, and so had missed them all the more. By midday Mass, she was headachey, salivating, and as soon as Easter came she wallowed in Cadbury eggs. The truth was, she didn’t in her heart of hearts want to give anything up.

  When Mom left, she’d collapsed for a year, after which she had to more or less rebuild herself from scratch. This she had done in secret, in the confines of her room, requiring only pictures from magazines, an AM radio, and the binding glue of her need not to be hurt again. The self she’d put together was a kind of Minerva of suburbia: fierce, cosmopolitan, dependent on no one. Her body was changing—she helped it along by living on Marlboros for six months, blowing smoke out through the window fan—and when she emerged, her mother hardly would have recognized her. She rid herself of her virginity at fourteen, her first year at the new private school in the City, to a junior, the leading scorer on the lacrosse team and second-richest boy in his class. His parents were never home, and there was something thrilling and dangerous about the empty seventeenth-floor apartment where they could do whatever they wanted. For a month, they hung out there after school, getting high, looking at his dad’s skin magazines, which she pronounced “gross,” and fucking. He knew what he was doing, she’d thought then. At any rate, she’d learned a lot. She’d learned to carry herself, sexually, like someone who knew what she was doing.

  And she had learned that you couldn’t stockpile anything that mattered, really. Feelings, people, songs, sex, fireworks: they existed only in time, and when it was over, so were they. Right now the stripped branches of the trees above her were like knuckles, like a child’s knuckly cursive on the soft purple vellum of the sky, and there was snow soaking through her jeans and the water in the corners of her eyes was stuck there, freezing, refusing to fall, and the little man was pacing in front of the limestone redoubt, but the second this interminable wait ended, it would all start to fall away into the past, to become unreal. Her need to tell Keith was a physical thing now, like the cells of her body crying out in alarm, even though she’d opened the door inside herself only the tiniest crack. But she would hold out another minute, and another, because she could.

 

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