Hometown

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by Marsha Qualey




  Table of Contents

  Copyright

  Hometown

  I

  II

  III

  IV

  V

  Hometown

  By Marsha Qualey

  Copyright 2014 by Marsha Qualey

  Cover Copyright 2014 by Untreed Reads Publishing

  Cover Design by Ginny Glass

  The author is hereby established as the sole holder of the copyright. Either the publisher (Untreed Reads) or author may enforce copyrights to the fullest extent.

  Previously published in print, 1995.

  This ebook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without written permission from the publisher or author, except in the case of a reviewer, who may quote brief passages embodied in critical articles or in a review. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each person you share it with. If you’re reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then please return to your ebook retailer and purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.

  This is a work of fiction. The characters, dialogue and events in this book are wholly fictional, and any resemblance to companies and actual persons, living or dead, is coincidental.

  Also by Marsha Qualey and Untreed Reads Publishing

  Thin Ice

  Venom and the River: A Novel of Pepin

  One Night

  Close To a Killer

  http://www.untreedreads.com

  Hometown

  Marsha Qualey

  I

  Departure

  Pyroball—

  They never should have let the kid play. He was too little and new. He hadn’t been hanging around long enough to get the feel of the game, to understand the timing and learn the moves.

  The kid held the tennis ball too long. Worse, he gave it a squeeze, and a trickle of alcohol slid down his wrist. The flame followed, igniting the sleeve of his raggedy shirt.

  He dropped the ball and howled. A girl screamed.

  A bigger flame now. The kid shrieked.

  Border Baker slipped out of his leather jacket and ran to the burning boy. “Sit down,” he barked. The kid dropped to his knees, and Border covered the arm with the jacket, wrapped it tight until the flame was smothered.

  The air stank.

  Others crowded around them. The kid fell over and Border held him. “Kid, do you live with your family?” The boy nodded. “Someone call them. Who knows his family?”

  No one did.

  He looked at the boy and said, “Passed out.” He rocked the boy. “You’ll be okay, kid. It’ll be okay.”

  They carried him to the emergency room at Presbyterian. Ten blocks with dead weight. The boy groaned, but didn’t come around. Border had an arm under the kid’s back and a hold of his good hand. The burned one flopped loose. No one would touch it.

  Sunday morning, 2 a.m., and it was slow in the E.R. The Saturday night drunks and brawlers had been sent home. Two women with babies, a man with an ice pack on his face, no other emergencies. The admission clerk rolled her head away from the TV and said, “Yeah, kids?”

  “He’s been burned,” said Border. The clerk saw the hand and shouted. Suddenly the room was filled with adults doing their jobs.

  Riley handed Border the leather jacket, murmured something, and all the kids fled. Border shrugged and found a chair. He was tired and he didn’t mind answering questions. Hospitals, there were always questions. He’d even talk to the cops, if they came. It wasn’t his tennis ball, his alcohol, his game, he could say. Yes, Officer, he knew they shouldn’t play in the arroyos. Please, Officer, he’d only been there to find Riley, who owed him ten bucks.

  “Riley, hey!” Border called, remembering. He twisted around. No kids anywhere. Ten-dollar loan to Riley. Dumb. Dumb as playing pyroball.

  The clerk came with the questions. Border told what he knew, which was next to nothing.

  “His parents? His address?”

  Border shrugged.

  “Then we’ll just wait until he’s awake,” said the clerk. She went back to watching television, switching channels until she found news. A woman with incredible hair was interviewing generals in Saudi Arabia. The generals looked concerned. Manly. The reporter looked small. Border found a Tootsie Roll in his jacket pocket, unwrapped it, and popped it into his mouth. He turned the leather jacket around in his hands, checking for damage. The silk lining was scorched, no worse.

  Border zipped himself into the jacket, slunk down, and let the soft leather push up around his ears. He was in no hurry to leave. Anyway, where would he go? His dad might not even be at the apartment. “Let’s leave at noon,” the old man had said. “Please,” Border had replied. “You’re dragging me off to live in a strange place. Just let me have a couple more days with my friends.” His father had been firm. “It’s a long drive to Minnesota, and I want to have time to settle in before I start the new job.” Border had walked out then, claiming he had to find Riley and the ten dollars.

  Maybe he had left at noon, almost two days ago. Maybe this time he had shrugged off his son’s disappearance into the streets of Albuquerque and left at noon. But he’d have had to make a phone call first. A call to Border’s mother in Santa Fe.

  “It’s your problem this time. I give up. He’s sixteen and doesn’t think he needs a father. Fine. When you find him, you keep him.” Maybe he had said that this time.

  The calm and warmth of the hospital felt good. Border had spent Friday night at Dayton’s apartment, a place where kids could always crash. But it had snowed—the first really cold night of the winter—so there were a lot of people at Dayton’s. The music never stopped. Celeste was there with her baby. It cried, and she wanted to talk, anyone would do. With all that going on Border hadn’t slept. Tonight he hadn’t gone back, just sat in a diner with coffee and toast, asking for Riley anytime he saw someone he knew.

  Someone did come in who knew about Riley. Said there was a pyroball game going on up in Lobos Arroyo. Border bought the guy coffee and left, walked a mile in the cold. Ten dollars, after all.

  Border tapped his fingers along his thighs. Wished he had his recorder. Stupid, he’d left without it. Left it on top of his duffle bag. He knew then his fate was sealed. He’d have to find his father. Without the instrument, he had no way to earn a living. “You win, Dad,” he murmured. “I lose.” Defeated. Resigned. Tired.

  He slept for hours in the waiting room chair and woke to find his father sitting next to him.

  No smile? “Hey, Dad. Are we still leaving at noon?”

  “If you’re going to run and hide, you need to be smarter about it than to land in a hospital.”

  True enough. The old man was a nurse, an anesthetist, with lots of medical friends.

  “Did someone around here call you?”

  “I called. My kid disappears for two days, I check the hospitals. They told me you brought in a burned boy. One of your friends? Someone I know?”

  “Just a kid.”

  His father tugged on Border’s arm and they both rose. “I don’t know why you all play that game,” he said. “I don’t know why the cops haven’t stopped it, why they let it go on.”

  Border looked at the TV screen. Fighter jets were lined up on a Saudi Arabian tarmac. Lots of stuff was going on. Who knew why?

  Departure—

  Stalling tactic. “Maybe I should call Mom and say goodbye.”

  “You’ve said good-bye. And I doubt if you could reach her. When I was trying to find you, I called her. She said that the protest had been pushed up to thi
s morning. She was scheduled to be in the first wave. It’s almost sunrise. She’s probably been arrested by now.”

  “Does she have bail money? She might need bail money, Dad.”

  “Not from me. Not this time.”

  Son and father walked to their car. Border wanted to ask his father to drive to Santa Fe, just an hour north, hardly out of the way. He wanted to drive by the capitol and see the protesters chained to the benches, see the bodies laid across the street. See his mother, if she hadn’t already been hauled to jail.

  He’d been at her apartment the night final protest plans had been voted upon. It had been packed, twenty adults screaming at each other because they were mad at the government. No guns for oil! We must be heard! Border had served tea and cookies, then, when business was done, agreed to play recorder for the remaining people. Seven minutes of Mozart. The protesters were old friends, sort of; his family had only lived in New Mexico three years. But they were like the friends they’d had everywhere. Fort Collins, Missoula, Detroit, Winnipeg, Toronto, though that was so long ago he couldn’t remember.

  Always friends in the apartment, on the phone, on the sofa.

  When his mother and older half sister had moved to Santa Fe, he realized that most of the friends must have been theirs because the apartment became so quiet and empty.

  He liked the quiet. He practiced more often, tackled Brahms. They bought a television.

  Maybe she’d be on the news. “Dad, let’s stay one more night.”

  “Where? I’ve turned in the apartment keys.”

  Border grinned. “Are we homeless?”

  “No,” his father responded sternly. “We have a home waiting in Minnesota.”

  The old man was willing to stay longer, just for breakfast. They both ordered big and ate it all. Border got seconds and coffee to go. Slipping on ice, he spilled half the cup before they were back in the car, then sloshed some on his pants as he set the cup on the dash. An ominous start, he said to his dad, who said nothing at all.

  They reached the ramp onto the highway. Just before his father accelerated, Border looked back for a last glimpse of Albuquerque, his city. Out of the corner of his eye he glimpsed green hair come out of an apartment building.

  A shout lodged in his throat: Dana! But no, of course not. His sister hadn’t been in town for weeks and anyway, she was in South Carolina, visiting her father’s family.

  The city was slipping away. Beyond the highway, a child playing alone in the early morning hurled wet sand across a playground. Great brown gobs soared and fell, then hit the ground, scattering on impact.

  Storm—

  For the first forty miles they listened to the radio, Border’s father impatiently switching stations. War or football, that’s all there was. Less than two weeks remained before the UN’s ultimatum to Iraq expired. Three weeks until the Super Bowl. Announcers for either were deadly serious.

  “Four teams prepare for today’s battles; only two will survive.”

  “Tension is building among the troops waiting here at the Saudi border.”

  Border smiled. He liked hearing his name in the news. And for half a year he’d heard it plenty and seen it often in headlines.

  Iraqi army crosses Kuwait’s border.

  Saddam’s guns aimed at Saudi border.

  Border towns wait in fear.

  His favorite, though, was a headline his mother had clipped from the Santa Fe paper and sent without any added comment the day after hearing about a failed history test.

  Latest poll: Border violation unacceptable.

  *

  Border drove through most of the night while his father slept. Progress was slow; the old car refused to go over sixty. They switched drivers somewhere in Oklahoma, and he slept for an hour before waking up to daylight and the flattest country he’d ever seen, flatter even than Manitoba.

  They cleaned up at a rest stop. Border debated changing shirts, sniffed himself, decided it wouldn’t be worth it.

  South of Kansas City, snow started falling. Random flakes at first, then steadier and heavier. The sky behind them was a dark wall of clouds. Wind butted their car insistently.

  North of Kansas City, the highway became snow-covered except for two dark tracks in the right lane.

  They hadn’t said much at all the entire trip and now they spoke less. A grunt from the father, soft music from the son as he hummed and tapped his fingers along his thighs in a deliberate pattern, recorder notes, a Telemann minuet.

  They exited somewhere in Missouri, nearly skidding off the ramp. Three cars had gone off. Border looked for stranded travelers, but saw only empty vehicles and snow.

  “Maybe the war began, they dropped the bombs, and we’re the last ones left on earth,” he joked. His father didn’t smile. “Maybe the radiation is seeping down with the snow and destroying all life.”

  “Why are we alive?” his father grumbled.

  “We’re in a Volvo.”

  They found a town with a motel. “Free breakfast,” Border read on the motel sign. He hoped for donuts.

  They were given the last room. Could they share a bed? the clerk asked. Border grinned, his father nodded, the clerk took the credit card.

  Border returned to the car to get their bags. He couldn’t even see across the parking lot, and snow blanketed the car hood. He wrote a message with his finger.

  Storm lashes Border.

  Snowbound with Snowbirds—

  They had a vending machine supper and then went to bed. His father slept while Border flipped channels. After midnight some of the movies got raunchy and Border watched, wondering. His father woke up briefly and looked at the screen.

  “Turn it off,” he commanded before falling back asleep.

  Border obeyed; he’d seen enough.

  When he woke, he dressed with stealth and went to find the free breakfast. The lobby was crowded with old people.

  One man waved an arm. “This way, son,” he called. “The food is over here.”

  Trapped now. All eyes on him. Border fixed a smile on his face and wove through the crowd until he reached the small kitchen at the end of the lobby.

  Donuts and bagels, juice and coffee. Border took some of everything and found a chair next to the gas fireplace. When he had a mouthful of bagel, his face was shadowed. He looked up and saw the friendly man who’d hailed him.

  Border rose, balancing things, and offered the man his chair.

  “Goodness no, son. I suppose this table can hold me. Sit back down and eat. John Farmer.”

  Border tongued some cream cheese from behind a molar and let it slide down his throat before speaking. “Border Baker.”

  “Great galumphing boy, aren’t you?”

  This, Border decided, was one of those inane adult comments that required no response. He looked at his sneakers, size thirteen. He sipped juice.

  John Farmer tried again. “Some storm, hey?”

  Border sipped coffee.

  “What I most want to know, son, is about your barber. Did he die on the job, or what?”

  John Farmer got whacked on the shoulders.

  A petite woman, with gray hair neatly knotted on the top of her head, winked at Border. “That’s what you do if he gets out of line.” She sat on the table next to Border’s inquisitor. “I’m Lil Devereaux.”

  “Don’t be fooled, we’re married. Six weeks now. She just wouldn’t change her name.”

  His mate stole his coffee cup. “And neither would you, Farmer.” They bantered on, touching each other gently.

  “She’s an artist,” John Farmer said proudly. “A print-maker.”

  “My mother’s an artist,” Border said.

  “He speaks!” said John Farmer, earning another whack. Lil leaned forward. “What does she work in?”

  They waited while he sipped more juice. “Performance.”

  John emitted a gleeful noise. “Is she one of those women who goes naked on stage?”

  Whack.

  The husband
turned to the wife. “If I kept doing that to you, there’d be cops and judges and restraining orders.”

  “Then behave, Farmer, and I’ll stop it.”

  “Nudity isn’t a big part of her work,” said Border, “but she’s done it.”

  “Have you seen her do it, your own mother?”

  “Twice.”

  John Farmer frowned. “That can’t be healthy.”

  Border brushed crumbs off his chest. “I’d be happy if you’d write her and tell her that, Mr. Farmer.”

  “Just John, please. No one’s ever called me Mister. Colonel, maybe. U.S. Army, retired.”

  “Is she a solo artist?” Lil asked.

  Border nodded.

  “What’s her name?”

  “Diana Morrison. She toured with her last show. Maybe you’ve heard of her?”

  Lil shook her head.

  “During the day she’s a chemist.”

  “Goodness,” said John Farmer. “What an interesting combination. Is she here? Where is she? I’d like to meet her.”

  “No, she’s…” Whoa. In jail. “She’s in Santa Fe. My father and I are moving to Minnesota.”

  The background noise was silenced when the front door opened and cold air and snow rolled in. The snow settled, revealing a motel employee carrying boxes of donuts. Two bags of oranges swung from his wrists.

  “All the highways are closed, but Hinkley’s market was open and I cleaned it out!”

  Cheers rose to such a level that Border doubted anyone could still be sleeping in the motel. He excused himself, rose, and filled his coffee cup, then circulated around the room offering refills. When he returned the empty pot to the warmer, he found John Farmer brewing more.

  “See that man, the one with the thin mustache?”

  “Yes, Colonel.”

  “Call me John, or I’ll get my wife to wallop you. That man’s a barber, Border. He could finish the job.”

  Border ran one hand along the shaved side of his head, while his other tucked shoulder length locks behind an ear.

  “You’re moving to a new place, son. Might not be wise to make yourself an easy target. You can grow it back any way you want, after they get to know you.”

  Border considered the wisdom of this while looking at the television. Most everyone was watching. Someone had found a remote and switched from Desert Shield news to Regis and Kathie Lee. Regis was terrorizing a guest chef. All the women giggled, and the men seemed to be drifting toward naps. Border felt John Farmer’s eyes on him.

 

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