Year of the Tiger. Lisa Brackman
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CHAPTER SIX
What I remember most, from that first day in the sandbox, is how fucking hot it was, and how I was so thirsty because there wasn’t enough bottled water, and the donkey.
I was looking out the window of the Humvee, trying to make out the landscape through three inches of dirty glass, and it was almost like being under water. I saw desert: flat, endless scrub, different shades of dirt, an occasional clump of cinderblock buildings that blended into the gray dust.
We ground to a stop at the outskirts of some little town – just a crossroads and a couple of telephone poles stuck between mud-brick houses and a few painted cement storefronts. A truck was broken down in front of us.
Across from me, tied to one of those poles, was a donkey hooked up to a cart. Flanks crisscrossed by whip scars, ribs sticking out, head hanging down, like it’d had a lifetime of getting the shit kicked out of it.
‘Heard Hajji’s rigging donkey carts with explosives,’ the soldier next to me said.
I must have looked scared. I was scared. I’d joined the National Guard, not the fucking Marines. I was nineteen years old. I’d enlisted in the Guard after high school and trained as a medic. I thought I’d learn a skill, get some money for college. I didn’t think I’d be doing this.
‘Hey, it’s just a rumor.’ He gave me an awkward pat and stared out the window. A little gaggle of kids hung out by the block wall surrounding one of the houses, laughing, shoving, daring each other to approach us. A couple of them waved. Behind them I saw two women, dressed head to toe in black abayas, looking like some kind of flightless crows.
‘Most of these people are glad we’re here,’ the soldier told me. ‘You’ll see.’
I start to wake up, and I don’t know where I am. Behind my eyes, everything’s bright and yellow, and I’m filled with dread, because I don’t want to be there again, in that place.
Except … except … I miss it too.
I open my eyes. I can’t get oriented. The direction of my bed doesn’t make any sense, the wall is on the wrong side of the room, my head’s facing the wrong way, like I’m sleeping in the Bizarro universe. Then everything shifts into position, to where it belongs. I’m not over there. I’m lying on my futon in my little room in Chuckie’s apartment off Wudaokou Dajie.
I lie there for a minute, rubbing my face, which feels kind of numb. My eyes feel swollen. I close them. Start sinking back into sleep.
I feel my heart thudding too fast in my chest before I actually remember what happened last night.
Was it really last night? Did that really happen? I have this sudden flash of myself lying in bed, John taking off my bra. I shudder. I think I’m going to throw up.
I struggle to stand up, rising first to my knees, grasping the back of the chair. My limbs feel like they’re filled with sand.
As I brace myself against the chair and stagger to my feet, I see my jeans folded neatly on the seat, my shirt resting on top of that, my bra draped across the shirt like it’s some kind of post-modern window display.
The bra was on the chair back, I think dimly. That’s where John put it last night. He must have moved it.
I stumble into the bathroom, thinking I’m going to puke. But I don’t. Instead, I splash some water on my face. Stare at myself in the mirror. My eyes look huge. Everything still glows around the edges.
What the fuck did he give me?
Okay, I think, okay. Whatever that was all about, he’s gone, I’m here, and I’m okay now.
As I come out of the bathroom, I hear a lot of noise coming from Chuckie’s bedroom.
For a minute I just stand there, my heart pounding in my throat. I’m thinking, what if John’s still here?
But then I hear a crash that sounds like falling books, and Chuckie curses.
Okay.
I go back to my room and put on my pants – not the ones on the chair: I don’t want to touch that pile of clothes just yet. I wander out into the kitchen. Slanting yellow light comes in through the window. It’s past two in the afternoon.
I pour myself some water from the fridge. And notice something weird: all the dirty dishes have been washed and are sitting neatly in the dish rack.
Not Chuckie, I think. In general, Chuckie doesn’t do dishes. He lives on takeout. So do I. That’s about two week’s worth of dishes from both of us in that rack.
I shudder again and leave the kitchen.
Here’s Chuckie coming out of his room, carrying an armload of clothes and a duffel bag.
He sees me and jerks back like he’s stuck his finger in a light socket. Then he looks away.
‘What’s up?’ I ask.
‘Going home to see the family,’ he mutters.
‘Oh, yeah?’
Chuckie can’t stand his family. At least that’s what he always says to me. ‘They are just idiots,’ he complains. ‘Hopeless.’ And they live in Bumfuck Shanxi – nowhere Chuckie wants to hang.
‘For a little while. My mother says she wants me to come.’
I see his face. Pale. Scared.
‘You okay?’ I ask.
His eyes dart around like he’s being buzzed by gnats and can’t figure out where they’re coming from. He shakes his head, fractionally.
‘You wanna go downstairs, get a cup of coffee?’
He nods.
There’s this DVD store/coffeehouse in the collection of shops that make up the ground floor of the buildings facing Wudaokou Dajie. The coffee isn’t great, but it doesn’t totally suck either. I go there sometimes when there are no beans in the house.
Chuckie and I grab our coffees at the orange countertop and sit at a little round table by the window with a scenic view of the parking lot and the lovely four-lane thoroughfare that is Wudaokou. Taxis and private cars whiz by while knots of pedestrians make their way across the street like avatars in some Nintendo game, risking all to gain the treasure on the other side.
Chuckie rips open two packs of sugar and dumps them in his coffee.
‘So, what happened?’ I finally ask. ‘You get busted at the Matrix, or what?’
‘Or what,’ Chuckie says eventually.
I’m confused by this until I realize that he’s attempting to play with the language. ‘You got busted by somebody else?’
Chuckie doesn’t exactly nod. He stirs his