The Last Days of California: A Novel (12 page)

BOOK: The Last Days of California: A Novel
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“What schedule?” she asked.

“You know what schedule,” I said. “California.”

“I’m still not sure why we’re going there,” Elise said. “Why are we going there?”

“You know why,” I said.

“Remind me.”

“Because that’s where Marshall is,” I said.

“It’s not like we’re going to meet him.”

“We might,” I said.

“That’s not the reason we’re going to California,” our father said.

“Then why are we going?” Elise asked.

“Because it’s in Pacific Time,” I said.

“I’m not asking
you
. I’m asking
Dad
.”

“We’re preparing,” I said.

“Shut up, Jessica,” she said. Nobody called me Jessica. I didn’t like the sound of it. It had too many syllables. “Dad?”

“We’re on a pilgrimage,” he said calmly, but his ears and neck were red and he was shaking.

I watched him fade back to his normal color and thought about how he’d sold the trip to us in the first place. We were at home, eating my mother’s meatloaf and my father’s cornbread, when he’d pitched the idea: a pilgrimage to California. We didn’t need a caravan—we could be our own caravan. And hadn’t we always wanted to see the country? I’d wanted to go to Disney World as a kid, and I’d wanted to see some caves once, after watching a program about Mammoth Cave, but we only went to Destin year after year because one of my mother’s sisters had a condo there.

As the trip had been over a month away, I agreed easily. It was easy to agree to things when nothing was required of me at the moment, or in the very near future. I regretted it later, of course, when getting out of the thing I had agreed to was much more difficult than not having agreed to it in the first place, but I knew this wasn’t like that. If my father wanted to go to California, we would go. If he wanted a pilgrimage, we would be his pilgrims. Our mother reminisced about a cross-country trip she had taken as a child. It was a story I’d heard many times, all centering around one bathroom stop in which her father had embarrassed them, and the geysers at Yellowtsone. It was like she had no memory at all, like she’d taken photographs so there’d be no need to recall the actual event. Elise was the only one to resist, saying she had cheerleading practice and might need to retake a class. When that didn’t persuade him, she said, “
The last shall be first and the first shall be last,
” but this seemed to strengthen his argument. We would wait our turns, he said.

I looked out the window. There was no grass, no trees. My father drove faster and faster, the land so barren it was easy to imagine the world had already ended and we hadn’t heard.

“These are some
of the least populated counties in the country,” our father said, breaking the silence.

Elise’s phone beeped and she smiled at it. Then she leaned over and said, “Dan dropped his phone in the lake. He had to get a new one.”

“I told you,” I said, though it didn’t explain why he hadn’t emailed her, or why he hadn’t borrowed someone else’s phone to call her. Any one of his friends would have had her number.

She touched her hair, as if to remind herself she was beautiful.

“I told you he wasn’t in a ditch.” I scratched at my tiger face, getting yellow paint in my fingernails. “Which lake?”

“I don’t know
which lake
,” she said, and stopped typing to give me a dirty look.

They spent the next half-hour texting. I wanted to text someone but no one was expecting to hear from me. I had friends but they were mostly school or church friends. We didn’t play with each other’s hair or tell each other our deepest secrets. It wasn’t at all what I’d thought junior high friends would be like—I thought we’d be sleeping in the same bed, shopping for clothes. I thought we’d tell each other everything. I knew it was my own fault. When someone lightly touched my arm or leg while we were talking, I flinched. I didn’t know how I could want things so badly while making it impossible to ever get them.

In Valentine, we insisted on stopping so we could get a snack.

I went to the bathroom—my tiger was all smeared and there were little trails of flesh peeking out. I washed it off, the paint leaving behind a sticky yellow film.

I bought a package of gummy bears—250 calories, no fat—and Elise bought a bag of popcorn, a giant pickle, and a Sprite. She never drank Sprite because it had a lot of calories, and I took it as a sign that she was starting to think about the baby.

“A little old for face-painting, aren’t you?” the man behind the register asked Elise.

“I still trick-or-treat, too,” she said.

I thought about Elise’s Halloween costumes: she was always a dead slutty something, same as her friends. She seemed too cool to be a dead slutty something but she wasn’t.

Back in the car, I ate all of the red gummy bears first, followed by the orange and yellow, and then the white and green. I poked my mother and dropped my empty wrapper into her lap. She opened her eyes and turned to me.

“Do you have a headache?” I asked. She liked to call them cluster headaches because it made them sound more ominous. She said they were very serious and that more than 20 percent of the people who got them killed themselves.

“I’m just resting,” she said. “I didn’t sleep well last night.”

“Me either.”

“I’m sorry,” she said, squeezing my hand.

We usually stopped
by four o’clock, but my father drove past four o’clock and past five o’clock. We grew antsy, counting down the miles to towns that quickly came and went. Finally, he took an exit for a rest station.

We got out and stretched, looked around. The vending machines were protected by bars.

“Not even the vending machines are safe here,” I said, but no one laughed. The rest stop was pretty nice, actually—the lawn was freshly mowed and there was a fountain. People walked their dogs.

My mother, Elise, and I went into the bathroom.

“Men have sex in rest-stop bathrooms,” Elise said. “I read an article. They call them something—I forget what they call them.”

“You’re always filling your mind with trash,” our mother said. “If you fill your mind with trash, that’s what you’ll think about.”

“You mean if you fill your mind with trash, you’ll be trash,” I said. I was in the middle stall, could see their feet on either side.

“That’s not what I mean,” my mother said.

“That’s exactly what you mean,” said Elise. “You think we’re trash.”

“Don’t bring me into it,” I said. “I’m not trash.”

Our mother got her feelings hurt, said we were always assuming things, putting words into her mouth.

Elise and I bought Cokes at the vending machines and sat beside the fountain, tapping our flip-flops on the water. First she’d tap, making ripples, and then I’d tap. When we grew tired of that, we made wishes. We tossed in our pennies first, one at a time, and then our nickels, dimes, and quarters.

“Van Horn’s coming up,” our father said, walking up behind us. “We’ll stop there.”

“That sounds like a good place,” I said for something to say. So much of what he said required no response, but if no one said anything, his words just hung there. He gave us the coins from his pockets and we threw those in, too, but after a while I realized I’d stopped wishing and was just throwing.

Van Horn, Texas,
was a tiny dot on the map.

Our father pulled into the crappiest motel we’d stayed in yet, sprawling and one-story, painted in hospital blues and greens.

“Things are steadily going downhill for this family,” Elise said. This struck us as funny and we laughed.

“We’re on a budget,” our father said. “How about I get you your own room? How about that?”

“That would be nice,” Elise said.

“I don’t know if that’s a good idea,” our mother said.

“It’ll be fine,” Elise said. “I won’t let Jess out of my sight.”

Our father got out of the car looking beaten, and I started to get that crushing feeling again, like my whole body was welling up, but then it went away and I was just irritated and hot.

While we got our luggage, a man on a bicycle cruised around us in wide circles. His pants were so short his skinny brown calves showed. One of his irises was whitish, terrifying. He rang his bell, nearly losing his balance, and my father pulled a tract out of the trunk. We must have had a thousand of them, stashed all over.

“Hey,” he called, flapping it back and forth at him. The man looked alarmed and circled wider before pedaling off.

“I bet this place is full of hookers,” Elise said.

“I don’t see any hookers,” our mother said.

“That’s because they’re all busy.”

My father handed me some tracts. Then he took the cooler out and opened the plug to let the water drain.

“I feel like I haven’t handed out tracts in forever,” I said.

“Speak for yourself,” he said. “I handed out dozens yesterday.”

“I can’t remember yesterday,” I said. “I’m losing track of my days—what day is it?”

“Thursday,” Elise said.

Our father gave us each a key and said he loved us and we said we loved him, too. Then we kissed our mother and told her we loved her.

I slipped tracts under windshield wipers as we went.

“People are going to hate you,” Elise said.

“Maybe somebody’ll read it,” I said.

“No one’s going to read it, it’s just going to piss them off.”

I inserted my key and pulled it out; the light blinked red. I tried again and got the same thing.

“You never do it right—there’s a technique. You have to put it in real slow and hold it there a second before pulling it out.” She winked at me and opened the door. We set our keys and purses on the table.

“This is the kind of place people kill themselves in,” she said, and I thought about our wholesome-looking cousin—she hadn’t killed herself, she’d been
murdered
. It seemed impossible. In all of the pictures and videos I’d seen of her, she’d looked normal, just a regular girl, like me but prettier.

“Maybe we’re out of money,” I said.

“Well,
yeah
, but we have credit cards and that’s what they’re for, so we don’t have to stay in motels with bike thieves and hookers,” she said. “I think he’s trying to teach us a lesson, but I’m not sure what it is.”

“Maybe they’re maxed out,” I said, unwrapping the thin bar of soap.

“He’s been using them,” she said.

“Maybe they’re
almost
maxed out.” I brought the bar to my nose—it smelled spicy. I washed my face again, trying to get the yellow tint off. Then I sat in bed while she plucked her eyebrows. She told me I ought to start plucking mine, that they were getting out of control.

“Are you gonna wash that thing off your face?” I asked, digging around in my ear. I scraped out something that felt like a bug but was just the crust of a tiny scab I hadn’t known was there.

“I like it.”

“It makes you look insane.”

“Take a picture first,” she said, tossing her phone onto my bed. I took a picture of her posed against the wall, making some sort of gang sign.

While she washed her face, I turned on the weak light and went through the contents of my bag. I refolded a couple of tank tops, counted the number of clean panties I had left. I was going to have to start washing them in the sink.

Elise stripped down to her bra and panties.

“Put your clothes back on,” I said.

“Why?”

“I don’t want to see you.” She seemed hurt, so I said, “You’re too pretty—it makes me feel bad.”

“Don’t say that.”

“Why?”

“I don’t like when people compliment my looks.”

“How come?”

“I don’t know,” she said. And then, “Because it reminds me that I’m going to die. If someone says I have nice teeth, I think,
One day they’ll rot
. If they say I have nice hair, I think about it falling out by the fistful.”

“I’d love it if people told me I was pretty. I’d trade it for smart or talented or anything else.”

“That’s stupid,” she said.

“You would, too.”

“No I wouldn’t.”

“You don’t know,” I said. “You have no idea.”

“Let’s go to the pool.” She unhooked her bra and I turned my head. There was a baby in her flat, tan stomach. I pictured it fully formed, a perfect little girl that looked exactly like her except for one thing—the eyes or nose of someone else. “You see this triangle here?” she asked, sticking a finger in the empty space below her vagina. Her pubic hair was shaved nearly to nothing. “Factory air. It’s Dan’s favorite part of me.”

“Who calls it that?”

“I don’t know, boys.”

“Where’d it come from?” I asked.

“I have no idea,” she said.

“Look it up on Urban Dictionary.”

She picked up her phone and typed while I waited. “ ‘The space created between a woman’s thighs when she’s standing with her legs parallel to each other, and perpendicular to the floor. As in, Dude, that chick had some nice factory air. I bet she doesn’t ever get any duck butter.’ ”

“What’s duck butter?”

“It just occurred to me—his favorite part of me is a part that doesn’t exist.”

My phone signaled the arrival of a text message and I dug it out of my purse. Nobody had called or texted me in days. One time my cell phone rang and Elise said, ‘That’s what your ringtone sounds like?’ as if I hadn’t had the same one for a year. The text was from an unknown number in our area code.
Bitch
, it said. It made my heart drop and I looked around the room as if the person could see me. I thought about who might have a reason to call me a bitch and came up with no one. It was the wrong number but I couldn’t help taking it personally.
Bitch
, I thought.
I’m a bitch.
I deleted it without telling Elise, who was down on the floor doing pushups, asking me how her form was.

We put on
our swimsuits and the too-short dresses we only wore to the pool, and walked around to the fenced-in area. We claimed a couple of chairs, draped the tiny motel towels over the backs of them. I stepped out of my flip-flops, nearly losing my balance. Elise looked natural out of her clothes but I didn’t; it was my attempt to look natural more than anything that made me so awkward. I felt like my limbs had been taken off and reattached in different positions.

BOOK: The Last Days of California: A Novel
13.5Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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