Pink Smog (4 page)

Read Pink Smog Online

Authors: Francesca Lia Block

I loved the radio. I would lie in the dark with my ear to the speaker listening to the popular songs. There was a song I liked called “Seasons in the Sun.” I knew it was cheesy, especially compared to the “serious” music my dad liked but I liked it anyway. It was about a boy who was dying, saying good-bye to the girl he loved. It made me cry. I closed my eyes and saw a boy and a girl running on the beach. The light was gold and dangerous. The boy was going to die. It was Los Angeles light.

The gentle arguing escalated to screams of broken glass. We hadn't been to the private beach in Malibu in a while. I heard Edie, the young wife in hand-painted silk chiffon, had left Irv, the producer. The boy in the song was probably dead.

My dad was gone.

You must not be afraid
, the man in the Mercedes had said.

But I always kind of was.

WINTERISH

T
he next day there was a green spiral notebook on my desk in Miss Spinner's class. My heart started pounding so hard I thought it would slam through my chest. The notebook turned out to only be someone's English journal, left behind from the last class, but after that, everywhere I looked I thought I saw that slam book following me around. I wondered what they were going to write about me. It made me sweat no matter how much antiperspirant I used. L.A. didn't seem beautiful to me anymore. The air was always hot like the city was on fire.

When I came home from school, three red dogs were sitting in front of our door. They were sitting so close together that they looked like one dog with three heads. I vaguely remembered a story my dad had told me about a three-headed dog that guarded the gates of hell. My mom was always getting mad at my dad for telling me scary stories but I liked them. And I wasn't usually scared of dogs—I loved dogs. I walked the ones in the neighborhood to make extra money and I loved them all. The little, snippety ones and the shy, fat ones and the strong, proud ones. I begged my parents for a puppy all the time. But now I was afraid.

The dogs growled at me and licked their chops. They had sharp ears and teeth and angry curling tails. I backed away. That was when I heard the cackling sound. It was the girl again. She was standing behind me with her arms crossed over her chest. She wore the same childish dress and shoes.

“What's wrong?” she said in that voice like an angry bird's. “Don't you like my chow chows?” The dogs growled and she clicked her tongue at them.

“Your dogs are in front of my door,” I said.

“Oh, really? Just like I was the other night. How funny.” She began to laugh.

“Please move them.”

“Sure!” She bent over and clapped her hands. “Come on, boys,” she said. “Go get her!”

The dogs tensed, and sniffed the air, then leaped up and tore down the stairs toward me. I took my roller skates off my shoulder and stood ready to hurl them at the vicious red fur faces. I don't remember anything more about that moment except the sound of a whistle behind me. The dogs stopped and put their heads down, began to whimper.

The boy, the one from the pool, was standing there.

“Anna,” he said. “What the hell are you doing? Get them out of here!”

The girl stared at him and opened her mouth like she was going to say something, but he raised his hand—his pale blue eyes were a command. She called the dogs and huffed off daintily with her nose and butt in the air.

I sat down on the bottom of my steps and rubbed the sides of my face. I was too freaked out to even be happy to see Angel Boy.

“What was that?” I asked.

He flipped his skateboard up with one toe and caught it. “Are you okay?”

“Who are you? And why are you always here when I need you?”

He shrugged. “You sure do need me a lot,” he said. Then he added: “He was right.”

Before I could say anything else, he had skated away over the pavement, swiveling his hips slightly to steer the board. I didn't even try to run after him, though I wanted to. Everything was just too weird.

“Mom,” I said out loud, but barely. “I need help. I need you.” I knew she couldn't hear me and that she probably wouldn't come even if she could. “Mom? Dad?”

Who was the boy? He had rescued me two times. He knew the girl, and the dogs. He seemed to know me, too. Maybe he really was my guardian angel. I wished he had stayed long enough for me to talk to him, although I wouldn't have really known what to say. He was so cute that after I recovered from the shock of what had happened I would probably have started mumbling or stuttering and made a fool out of myself.

All I wanted was for Charlie to call. I had no idea how to reach him. The only real friend he had was Irv Feingold and I didn't have his phone number. Besides, what would I say—
Have you seen my daddy
? And he probably didn't want to think about people leaving after what happened with Edie.

Actually, I didn't just want Charlie to call—I wanted him to drive up in the battered yellow T-bird and take me away. We would drive across the country, all the way to the East Coast. We would live in a tiny apartment in Manhattan and I would go to school there. I wouldn't miss the sun. I wouldn't miss the pink sky. I wouldn't miss the palm trees or the diamonds in the pavement. I would see beauty again, everywhere I looked. I would paint the walls of my room pink and I'd paint the floor black with silver sparkles. My dad would take me to the Metropolitan Museum to see the huge Buddhas and the indoor pyramid and the van Goghs. I'd learn about all the weird, dark music that he had told me about. The Velvet Underground and the Stooges. I'd be someone else. No one would ever call me Louise again.

I trudged upstairs, like I had huge boots on my feet instead of the shortest version of lightweight cork platform sandals, and threw down my backpack. My mom was watching TV.

“Did you hear the dogs?” I asked her, but she didn't answer so I asked again.

“Dogs? What dogs? There aren't any dogs in this building.”

“Now there are,” I said. “Do you know about any new people who moved in?”

My mom pulled her bathrobe over her pilling, pale yellow nylon negligee. She had streaks of mascara on her cheeks and her face looked bloated. Her voice sounded muffled, cottony. “What?”

“There was a weird girl with three dogs. She tried to sic them on me. This boy stopped them.”

“There aren't any new people here.”

“In Unit Thirteen.”

“This building doesn't have a thirteen. Bad luck.” She turned back to the TV. “And if it did, no one would live in it.”

“He was the boy that saved you,” I said but she wasn't listening. She had turned the TV sound up louder and was staring at the screen as if she could disappear inside if she stared hard enough.

Then the phone rang and we both jumped. She got it before I could.

“Hello? Hello?”

She slammed the receiver down.

“Who was that?” I asked.

“They hung up. Wrong number probably.”

School was not where I wanted to be either but it was better than home. Or was it? There weren't any chow dogs after me but there was Staci Nettles and she was about as bad.

“Hey,” she said. She and her friends, Marci Torn and Kelli Glass, were standing in front of me as I sat on the front steps putting on my skates. They flipped their hair in perfect unison. I noticed my neighbors, the twins Mary and Wendy Mendoza, were watching from a little distance away.

“Hi, Staci.”

“I saw you throw the slam book away.”

I could hardly tie my laces under her stare.

“We could have gotten busted. Luckily, Marci fished it out or you would have been in deep shit.”

I realized I was holding my breath. Certain people can smell fear the way dogs do.

“I strongly suggest you never do anything like that again,” Staci told me. “Stand up.”

“What?” I said.

“Stand up.” Marci and Kelli took me by the shoulders and lifted me into position, held me there.

Then Staci stretched her gum out over her tongue and blew a giant pink bubble in my face.

I rocked unsteadily backward on my wheels, caught myself. Staci took the wad of gum out of her mouth, examined it thoughtfully, and stuck it in my hair.

The hair that I had finally, painstakingly grown out of its pixie cut. The hair that, though thinner and less shiny than Staci's, Marci's, or Kelli's, still rendered me less vulnerable to the cruelty of junior high. Or so I thought. Hair was power. Think of Marilyn. Think of Elizabeth Taylor. Think of Bette Davis. They were defined by their hair.

The blood rushed to my face and I reached to feel the sticky wad of saliva-soaked putty matting together the thin strands.

Wendy and Mary Mendoza shook their heads at Staci. Then they waved their hands in the air in an odd gesture that looked as if they were summoning someone.

“Not again,” I heard a voice say with a sigh.

Staci, Marci, Kelli, and I turned around—there was a boy standing there, watching us. Mary and Wendy were gone.

“Are you getting into trouble again?” the boy asked.

The girls' mouths hung open as they looked from him to me, and back again. Weetzie knew this guy? The cutest boy ever? An older boy?

I didn't want him to see me like this. Sweaty and upset and with gum in my hair. Cornered by the prettiest, meanest girl in my grade. Why was he here? “I don't need your help.”

Staci, Marci, and Kelli snickered. The boy moved closer to me. “You need to leave her alone.”

“Come on, Weetzie,” he said, taking my hand, which immediately started to sweat. “I've got the Bug. I'll give you a ride.”

I went with him shakily on my skates and when we got to the yellow VW with the surfboard on top I leaned against the side for support. He opened the passenger door for me.

“They're still watching,” he said. “Do you want to get in?”

“I don't know you,” I replied. “You could be anyone, anyone at all.” When I was nervous or upset I sometimes spoke like someone out of an old movie.

He squinted at me. He was wearing a pale blue cotton T-shirt the color of his eyes and off-white painter's pants with the loop on the side for the paintbrush.

“My name is Winter,” he said.

“How do you know my name?”

“I know Charlie.” He glanced over at the girls behind us. “They're still watching.”

I got in the car. He knew Charlie. He knew my dad.

I was driving away from school in a yellow VW Bug with the cutest boy I'd ever seen up this close.
I know Charlie
, he'd said.

“You okay?” he asked me, not looking over.

“Did you say your name is Winter?”

“Yeah.”

“Last name?”

“First name. My last name's much weirder.”

“There's no winter in L.A.” I didn't mean to be rude but another thing I did when I was nervous was to chatter randomly.

“I know. I guess just winterish. I was born in late December.”

I fingered the wad of gum in my hair. I wanted to tear it out. I wanted to take a shower and rinse away all of Staci's spit from my body. I wish I had worn something cute. I had on my red Dittos from last year and they were a little too short in the leg and pulled at the crotch. Red wasn't even my color. But since my dad left I just wore whatever I could grab in the morning and mostly it didn't matter—there wasn't anyone I wanted to impress anymore.

“Besides, with a glass castle name like yours I wouldn't be throwing stones.” He grinned good-naturedly. “Weetzie?
Bat?

“How do you know Charlie?” I asked him. He punched a cassette into the car stereo. It was a woman's voice—harsh but somehow seductive—it made me want to hear more.

“You call him Charlie?”

“I just started when I was little. I had this huge crush on Charlie Chaplin and it made me think of him when I said it. It made us feel closer, too, I think. Like our special language. Charlie and Weetzie instead of Daddy and Louise.” Why had I told him so much? Sometimes I just babbled on.

“Louise?”

“You didn't answer my question.”

I wasn't sure if he was going to. Finally, he said, “When he left he asked if I'd look out for you.”

“What does that mean?” I asked. So much for my guardian angel theory. Or maybe not? “That doesn't tell me anything.”

“I wasn't supposed to tell you.” He turned onto our street. It was that September late afternoon time when the light slants through the leaves casting purplish-blue shadows and the air is just beginning to crackle with the smell of autumn. “Don't mention me to him.”

I closed my eyes and pushed my head back against the headrest. Some of the stuffing was coming out of the seat underneath me. The car smelled musty, like sawdust. The engine rumbled in the back. Bugs were weird, really, like little animals. There used to be this one that drove around town with eyelashes attached over the headlights.

“Well, now you have to. Tell me, I mean.”

“I didn't think I'd have to help you so many times,” he said. “I mean, it's only been a few days since he left, right? I didn't think I'd ever even have to meet you.”

“Oh, great, thanks.”

He parked the car and turned to look at me. I sat frozen in profile, the gum in my lank hair. What did he see when he looked at me? What did anyone see? Not someone lovable enough to keep her father from leaving.

I flashed back to a year before, riding on a bus in San Francisco with my dad.

Charlie has taken Weetzie there for her twelfth birthday. They stay in a tiny, lovely Victorian hotel on a steep hill and eat fettuccine at an Italian restaurant. The waiter takes her food away before she is done and she cries—Charlie orders her a whole new plate, fresh and steaming. She is happy but tries not to think about the fact that her mom isn't there with them
.

That weekend is the first time she thinks she is in love. On the bus there is a beautiful man, the most beautiful man she has ever seen, tall and thin with sparkling green eyes and golden skin and hair and a gold hoop in his ear. He is holding a bouquet of roses and she can't help thinking he is the one. It sounds silly to someone who doesn't understand but she is devastated by the fact that this man doesn't notice her, even though she could so easily imagine spending the rest of her life with him. She doesn't realize until later that why she was so upset, why she had this fantasy at all, had to do with the fact that her mom isn't there, that they weren't traveling as a family
.

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