Kameleon Man. Kim Barry Brunhuber

Чтение книги онлайн.

Читать онлайн книгу Kameleon Man - Kim Barry Brunhuber страница 8

Автор:
Серия:
Издательство:
Kameleon Man - Kim Barry Brunhuber

Скачать книгу

for fun.” But he’s lapsed back into unconsciousness. “Augustus?”

      “I don’t do shows.”

      “Why not?”

      “I’d break the clothes. Breff’s the man.”

      “I’ve lost the use of my legs.”

      “Come on, Pappa,” Augustus wheedles. “Show ’em how it’s done.”

      Breffni slides off the couch. “You know the drill. Head straight. Stomach in. Pretend you have a tail and tuck it between your legs. And just walk.”

      He doesn’t walk. He glides. As if he were a passenger on a moving sidewalk. Up and down the living room, looking side to side, while Cameo’s single ladies clap their hands. Until he walks into the wall and collapses.

      “Well, that’s my cue for beddy-bye,” Augustus says.

      “Me, too,” Crispen says, awake again.

      Breffni hasn’t moved. It doesn’t look as if he will until morning.

      I turn off the stereo, pull the mattress off the wall, lie down. It’s like sleeping on a playing card. “Do you have a sleeping bag or some kind of foam to put under this thing?” I ask anyone.

      “What are you? The princess and the pea?” Crispen growls, still on the couch. “Stop complaining and turn the lights off.”

      It’s dark and cold and they’re snoring in stereo. Breff is herking and jerking on the floor next to me, no doubt chasing women in his sleep. I’m still high as a weather balloon. My bed’s spinning. Doubts and misgivings are pulled from the recesses of my mind by centrifugal force. From this mattress the life of a Toronto model appears as glamorous as laundry. I’d like to press Save at this point in my life, just in case things don’t work out, in case this was all a big mistake. I’m messing with a fragile balance, I have to move carefully. Life itself is too good to be true, and if I were to think about that too hard, I’m afraid God would catch on and pull the plug. Good luck isn’t always as simple as it seems. Payback’s a mother. The mean happiness quotient takes care of that. That’s the average level of happiness I’m allowed to maintain in my life. I’m a firm believer in the principle of Even Steven. Like a sitcom hero, after a few adventures, I always return to the status quo. Tomorrow, with Feyenoord, the chance to become a one-name model. Iman. Elle. Instantly recognizable. Stacey. Any more good luck will skew the quotient. Something’s got to give. Things, if left to themselves, always even out in the long run.

       THREE

      I knew I was in trouble last winter when I first noticed the hairs growing out of my shoulders. The first strands, long and curly, were misplaced pubes. Now I have two fine epaulettes of black hair—a matching set to go with my legs and chest. I’m as hairy as a tarantula.

      “You’re the hairiest brother I’ve ever seen,” Augustus says, accosting me on the way to the shower. “Turn around, Pappa. Come out here. Check him out.” He pulls me with one arm into the living room where Breffni and Crispen are slurping cereal.

      “Ugh,” Breffni says. “Put him away. We’re eating.”

      “Ever think of shaving?” Crispen asks.

      “Cream’s the ticket,” Augustus says.

      I saw a tube of Augustus’s cream in the bathroom. Lye, thinly diluted with the promise of vitamin E. The warning, if it had one, would read: “Do not combine with skin. Not for internal or external use. If ingested, induce vomiting and call next of kin.” No thanks. I’d live with my fur. All the models these days shave, pluck, or wax. But as we all know, fashion works in cycles. Hairiness used to be next to godliness, considered by many a sign of virility. At least it was in those old sitcoms and pornos. Surely the trend of making all male models as smooth as marshmallows must come to an end. And when it does, I’ll be ready, my coat, glossy and neat, my puffs of shoulder hair, angel wings.

      I slink back into the shower. To my surprise, yesterday’s trickle of hot water is a monsoon. All of my anxieties about the morning’s go-see swirl clockwise down the drain. My penis sings in the rain. Back out, covered in a T-shirt and sweater, I tell them about the wood lice in the bathroom.

      “Wood lice?” Augustus asks, incredulous.

      “Are they contagious?” Breffni is only half kidding.

      “Only if you’re made of wood,” Crispen says.

      “They don’t actually eat wood. They live on rotting vegetable matter. They’re attracted to moisture and dark corners. So let’s try to leave the door open from now on.”

      “How come you know so much about bugs?” Crispen asks.

      “My mother’s a zoologist.”

      “That sounds serious. What happened to you?”

      “I thought I wanted to follow in her footsteps when I was young, but I failed grade nine science for salting all the worms and I never recovered.”

      “So what’d you do in school?” Crispen asks.

      “I took psych, concentrating on the biological basis of behaviour. But I started looking at myself like I was a stranger, so I dropped out. And here I am. Now can I get some food? We’re going to be late.”

      I eye the bag of Lucky Charms, but Breffni warns me off with a look. I reach instead for the bag of desiccated generic flakes of corn on the top shelf, pour them into the only bowl left, a tea cup, then jump back in horror.

      “Don’t worry,” Crispen says. “The black ones are lucky.”

      I dump the bowl into the sink and settle for some leftover bee spittle on toast.

      “You look like you could use a caffeine suppository,” Crispen says. “You’d best perk up. This is the big day. Your first cattle call. Your first taste of who’s hot and who’s snot. And you’ll get to meet Chelsea Manson.”

      “Don’t trust Manson,” Breffni warns. “He’ll steal the eye out of your head. But he’s a good agent. At least the clients seem to like him. And that’s really all that matters. As long as he gets the bookings. But he’s gotta like you, or you’re done.”

      It’s only 8:30, and already I’m stressed. I pop some vitamin C for courage and some iron for good luck. “By the way, I took a message for Simien from Feyenoord while you guys were sleeping.” I wave the pink piece of paper. “What do I do with it?”

      Augustus smiles. “What do we do with messages for Simien, C.J.?”

      “We put it in his in-box.” Crispen takes the slip of paper, holds it aloft for a second, then lets it waft slowly into the bin by his side.

      I frown. “That’s the garbage can.”

      Crispen nods. “Indeed.”

      “Well, if he asks, what do I tell him?”

      “Don’t worry about him. Just concentrate on your audition. Are you going to wear that?”

      “You

Скачать книгу