Reading Online Novel

The Infinite Sea(93)



            “What kind of shit did he paint?” Razor asks.

            “Mostly that. Shit.” Not always, though. Not when he was younger and I was small and the hand that held mine was stained with rainbow colors.

            He laughs. “The way you joke. Like you don’t even know it’s a joke, and it’s your own joke.”

            I shake my head. “I wasn’t joking.”

            He nods. “Maybe that’s why you don’t know it.”





63

            AFTER THE EVENING meal I don’t eat and the forced banter and the minuscule awkward silences that drop between our sentences, and after the board comes out of the wooden box and he’s set up the pieces and we flip to see who’s the home team and he wins, I tell him I think I can handle my own fielding, and he smirks, Yeah, right, let’s go, girl, after he’s sitting beside me on the edge of the bed and after weeks of learning to let go of my rage and embrace the howling emptiness and after years of erecting fortress walls around pain and loss and the feeling that I will never feel again, after losing my father and losing Teacup and losing Zombie and losing everything but the howling emptiness and that is nothing, nothing at all, I silently say the word:

            HI

            Razor nods. “Yeah.” He taps his finger on the blanket. I feel the tap against my thigh. “Yeah.” Tap. “Not bad, though it’s cooler when you do it in slo-mo.” He demonstrates. “Get it now?”

            “If you insist.” I sigh. “Yeah.” I tap my finger on the bedrail. “Well, to be honest I don’t really see the point.”

            “No?” Tap-tap on the blanket.

            “No.” Tap-tap on the rail.

            The next word takes over twenty minutes to trace:

            HLP

            Tap. “Did I ever tell you about my summer job before there were no more summer jobs?” he asks. “Dog grooming. Worst part of the job? Expressing the anal glands . . .”

            He’s on a roll. Four runs and not a single out.

            HOW

            I won’t get an answer for another forty minutes. I’m a little tired and more than a little frustrated. This is like texting with someone a thousand miles away using one-legged runners. Time slows down; events speed up.

            PLN

            I have no idea what that means. I look at him but he’s looking at the board, moving the pieces back into position, talking, filling in the tiny silences that drop, stuffing the empty space with chatter.

            “That’s what they actually called it: expressing,” he says, still on the dogs. “Rinse, wash, rinse, express, repeat. So freaking boring.”

            And the black, soulless, unblinking eye of the camera, staring down.

            “I didn’t understand that last play,” I tell him.

            “Chaseball isn’t some lame-ass game like chess,” he says patiently. “There are intricacies. Intricacies. To win, you gotta have a plan.”

            “And that’s you, I guess. The man with the plan.”

            “Yes, that’s me.”

            Tap.





64

            I HADN’T SEEN Vosch in days. That changes the next morning.

            “Let’s hear it,” he tells Claire, who’s standing beside Mr. White Coat looking like a middle-schooler dragged into the principal’s office for bullying the scrawny kid.