City of God. Gil Cuadros
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“It’s out of respect,” she warned while she collected the things she needed from the glove box: a mirror, make-up, tissue. And as we walked the short distance down the street, I looked back and saw my father pull a six-pack of beer from the old cooler in front of the mercado. His hands dripped melted crushed ice, and the sidewalk became stained with its moisture.
My great-grandfather’s house always reminded me of a ranch, the oppressive heat of the San Joaquin Valley, the large wagon wheel leaning against the standing mail box, the way the long, tan, stucco building hugged the ground. I expected tumbleweeds to roll by, a rattlesnake to be coiled seductively in the flower bed’s rocks. My mother’s cousin, Evelyn, had been taking care of Papa and she met us at the door before we even knocked. My mother had just straightened herself again, licking the tips of her fingers in the driveway, touching up her hair on the porch. Evelyn and my mother fell into each other’s arms as soon as they saw each other, making a show of tears, almost religiously. She was the same age as my mother, thirty, maybe a few months apart. I stood awkward on the porch, afraid to walk in unannounced. Evelyn wore a flimsy dress, a brownish print the same color as the house. Her teeth were stained, and when she smiled her long dog teeth poked out. Hair hung down her back like dry weeds.
“Well,” she said, facing me, “who is this foxy young man?”
My mother laughed. “This is my oldest boy.” Evelyn swung her dress like she was dancing to a ranchero tune, showing her kneecaps, and I stared. My mother always wore pants and it was strange, I thought, for a woman to be home in a dress. She wasn’t going anywhere.
She tilted her head coyly at me. “Why don’t you give me a big hug. We’re family.” I put my arms around her like a mechanical claw. She pulled me in tight, placing my face above her breast. I could smell her sweat, a scent of dairy products, cheese and bad milk. It felt like her breast had dampened my face and I wiped away droplets from my cheek. “He looks like your old man, Lorraine.” My mother acknowledged this standing near a cabinet filled with ceramic salt and pepper shakers, ashtrays from Vegas, Tahoe, and the biggest little city, Reno. Mom had confided to me she wanted something to remember Papa by.
My mother said, “I just came over, Evelyn, to see where it happened.” She held a ceramic Siamese cat with an ear broken off and holes bored in its head.
Evelyn explained that she had come home late from work, she had found him in the bathroom, collapsed, a green mess pooled underneath him. She said, “He started having trouble, not making it in time, then I’d have to clean it up. Sometimes he’d lose it just sleeping in his chair. I told your mother, Lorraine, that he should go into a home. No one wanted to hear about it. I couldn’t take care of him twenty-four hours a day.”
My mother started to cry again and walked over to see the bathroom, a tissue covering her nose and mouth. I stood with Evelyn. I had heard so many stories about her, how she was dropped from the crib, how soft and impressionable the skull is at that age. My aunts would start low and sympathetic, how it wasn’t Evelyn’s fault for the way it was with her, but then would tell each other what a tramp, a slut Evelyn had become. They’d snicker about how she slept with black men, white men. Papa should have put her away. Evelyn’s Papa’s angel. Evelyn’s a lesbian.
Evelyn smiled at me. I looked around the living room, touched the lamps made out of thick coiled ropes, burlap shades. Evelyn lit a cigarette, clicked shut the silver-toned Zippo lighter. “Do you have a girlfriend?”
“No, not really,” I answered.
I felt embarrassed. My whole family was always asking when was I going to get a girlfriend. My mother begged me to find a girl soon, not to be so shy, said it was natural for me to like girls. She’d say she worries because she’s a mother, don’t you want to make your father proud, your brother should look up to you. The truth was I had a lot of friends who were girls. They would pass notes with me in class, short-lined confessions of love for some other boy. Their reasons for love were always the same: the color of eyes, the length of hair, the muscles sneaking out from the boys’ short-sleeved shirts. These same boys would shove me around before the bus came. My body would grow warm and my heart would pound when they put their hands on my chest and shoulders. I would notice the color of their eyes, the strength they possessed. “Fucking sissy,” they would say and then give me one good last punch.
Evelyn seemed like she couldn’t believe I wouldn’t have a girlfriend. “Oh, then you like someone. What’s her name?” I squirmed that I didn’t like anyone and no one liked me. She offered me a sip of her soda, it fizzed in a glass, water had ringed the wood coffee table.
“No, thank you,” I said.
“Oooh, you’re so polite. Why don’t you sit next to me.” I came over to the Afghan-covered couch where she sat. I could hear my mother’s sobs, the bathroom becoming an echo chamber. Evelyn moved close to me on the couch. “I bet you kiss like a stud,” she said. She put her hand on my knee and I started to feel a horrible warmth between my legs, growing. She squeezed my thigh as if to make me laugh, then asked, “What do you do for fun?”
I stumbled as I stood up, fell back down. “I go to the Scouts,” I offered, hoping the conversation would end and my mother would re-enter the scene, grab me by the wrist and take me away.
Evelyn looked deep in my eyes, as if to devour a creamy pastry. “Will you do me a favor?” she asked. I nodded, hoping it would involve leaving. “Will you kiss me?” I pulled back but she came forward and vise-gripped my head. Her other hand reached down and grabbed my dick, her nails digging into the khaki material of my pants. I wanted to vomit, her breath was like my father’s, unclean, like a whole night of beer. I shoved her hand off my lap and got up. I licked the sleeve of my shirt, trying to get out the taste of her. She started to laugh as I unlocked the door. The brightness of outside kicked in my allergies and I started to sneeze as I ran to Grandma Lupe’s house, saying out loud, “Forget my mother.” My father sat on the steps drinking his Miller’s. He tried to grab onto my butt as I passed him. I let the screen door slam behind me and ran for the nearest bathroom, Grandma Lupe’s. I barely made it before I puked. From inside I could hear my grandma talking on the phone saying Evelyn should have been locked up a long time ago. My head hung over the tub’s edge, water rushing down the drain. The porcelain reeked of Calgon and Efferdent.
Tension and humidity hung in the old house. Relatives were arriving every moment; my grandmother was wringing her hands. My mother was still crying that she couldn’t depend on anyone: my brother, too young; my father, always drinking; and me, worthless. I was too embarrassed to tell her why I had run out of Evelyn’s and had decided to hide out in the backyard. I was surprised that my mother had come to get me. My brother and I were playing in the old rickety garage filled with an ancient white Chevy on blocks, wooden barrels of pecans and walnuts in the dark back corner.
My mother wanted me at the kitchen table with all my aunts and my mother’s aunts. I was the only boy except for two viejos, my mother’s uncles, both too old to decline the meeting. My mother said, “You are family. You need to hear.”
My grandmother Mikala sat at the center of the long kitchen table; she mirrored the Last Supper needlepoint that hung, framed, above her head. Grandma Mickey’s face was near-silhouette because of the big open windows behind her. Jars of nopales glittered in the pantry. Cactus grew along the fence outside and guarded this secret meeting. Just as my mother would light up at the onset of a long story, Mickey smoked a Newport. She exhaled a large burst of smoke. “As you know, I went to the police. Papa had horrible bruises on his body,