"YOU don't do some guy, even some old guy, them motherfuckers are all NRA nuts, homie; you might think you get some old white dude can't do shit and he dust you up." VJ is telling Reebok this while they stand in the bus shelter, watch people coming and going in the mall parking lot, late afternoon. California spring breeze is blowing trash by, couple of wax cups from Taco Bell.
"He got an AK in his walker?" Reebok jokes. He's out of high school now, still the class joker.
"You laughin', some of those old dudes are strapped big. Some senile motherfucker shot Harold's dog, all the dog do is run up on his porch. They got those M16's, that shit pops off, you canceled."
"So you think… it should be girls?" Reebok ponders, scratching his tag into the clear plastic wall of the kiosk with a house key. Key to his grandma's house. His mama left town with that white dude.
"Girls maybe armed, too. Most of 'em at least got that pepper spray, but you smart, you don't give'm a chance to use it, you take it away, put it in their eyes." VJ nods to himself.
"Can't make her use the fuckin' ATM, she got pepper in her eyes.
"I hear that. I hear that. We just jack the bitch from behind, is all, take her pepper away. Maybe later on, we clock her, too." "When we do it?" Reebok asks. "Fuck it. What about that one?"
She knows that Avery loves her. There's no doubt about it. If he says, Barbara, don't call back… that means: Barbara, call back again; Barbara, don't give up. It was there in the catch in his voice. It was heartbreaking, really, how Avery suffered. He can't say what he means, not with his witch wife, that witch bitch, not with Velma looking over his shoulder. Busting his balls, excuse my French. Not letting his manhood emerge. His manhood trapped inside him. Avery should never have let Velma come into the office at all.
When Barbara had been in the office, it was beautiful, they'd share treats, and he'd smile at her in the way that meant, I want you, even though I can't say so, and you know I do and I know I do: I want you. It was so precious how all of that was in one smile! That was Avery. But Velma kept him on a leash like he's one of those little dogs with the hair puffed up over their eyes, little brown eyes like Avery's.
Coming out of the mall, Barbara's got the gift for Avery in her straw bag, the Italian peasant's bag she'd bought at the Cost Plus import place, and she's thinking maybe she should have charged the watch, because this was risky, she'd never stolen anything before, almost never, anyway nothing this expensive, and they could be following her out of the mall, waiting till she crossed some legal boundary, and it's not like they'd understand. Love paid for it, she could say to them, but they wouldn't understand any more than Velma did. Velma was the one who had pushed Avery into firing her.
Barbara unlocks her car, her hands fumbling. Then she goes all cold in the legs when a man speaks to her, in that sharp tone, and she's sure it's a store cop. She turns, sees it's a black guy, very young, not bad-looking. Wants some money probably. He's going to tell her his car ran out of gas and he just needs gas money or one of those stories.
"I don't have any change with me," she says. "I don't really believe in giving money to people, it just keeps them on the streets."
"The ho isn't listening," says the taller of the two. How old are they? Maybe twenty. Maybe.
"Lookit here," the other one says, the one with the blue ski jacket, and he opens the jacket and shows his hand on the butt of a gun stuck in the waistband of his jeans. "I said: Get in the car and don't scream, or I shoot you in the spine right here."
In the spine, he says. I shoot you in the spine.
It turns out their names are VJ and Reebok. Reebok keeps talking about making her give him a blowjob. VJ says some pretty mean things about her looks and her age, though she's only thirty-eight and she's only about thirty pounds overweight or so.
VJ says, "One thing at a time. She suck your dick. But just one thing at a time."
Barbara's at the wheel of the Accord, VJ beside her, Reebok in back. He has a gun, too, a kind of oversized pistol with a long black metal box for the bullets. He calls the gun a Mac.
What would it be like to suck his penis? Would it be clean? He seemed clean. She could smell aftershave on them both. It's okay if it's clean.
She wonders why she isn't more scared. Maybe because they seem so ridiculous and amateurish. They don't really know what they're doing. That amateur stuff could make them even more dangerous; an officer had said that on Cops.
They almost drive by her bank, so she has to point it out, though she told them which one it was. "There's my bank, if you want me to turn in."
"You better be turnin' in."
She changes lanes, cuts into the lot, kind of abruptly so that somebody honks angrily at her as she cuts them off. Then she glides the Honda Accord up to the ATM.
"You both getting out with me?" she asks as she puts the car in Park.
"You just shut up, ho, and let us work on what we do," VJ says. He looks at Reebok.
"I don't know. We both get out? That might look kinda…"
"Might look…"
"Neither one has to get out," Barbara says, amazed at her own chutzpah. "What you do is, you keep a gun on your lap under a coat, you watch me, and if I try to run or yell or anything, you shoot me. No wait—this is stupid! I can just give you the PIN number!"
They look at her with their mouths a little open as she digs through her purse, comes up with her Versateller card and an eyeliner pencil. Writes the number on the back of a receipt, hands it to VJ with the card. "I'll wait here with Reebok. He can keep an eye on me."
"How you know my name?" Reebok says with a whipping in his voice that makes her jump in her seat.
"You don't have to yell. I know your names because you said them to each other."
"Oh." He looked at his partner. "Go own." That's the way the word sounded. Own. She guessed it was Go on.
VJ starts to get out of the car. Then he turns back, takes the keys out of the car. "Don't try any weird shit, my man got a gun, too."
"I know. I saw it. It's a big one."
He blinks at her in momentary confusion. Then he gets out, goes up to the ATM. He puts the card in—it comes back out. He puts the card in—it comes back out. She rolls down the window.
"Whoa, ho, what you doin'!" Reebok barks at her from the backseat.
"I'm just going to tell him something about the ATM." She sticks her head out the window. "VJ? You've got the card turned the wrong way."
He turns it the right way around. It goes in and stays. He stares at the screen, punches the numbers. Waits.
Barbara's thinking. Aloud she says, "Were you ever in love with anybody, Reebok?"
"What?"
"I'm in love with Avery; he's in love with me. But we can't see each other much. I see him outside his house sometimes."
"What the fuck you talking about? Shut the fuck up."
VJ comes back scowling, gets into the car.
"There ain't shit in there but forty dollar." He holds up the two twenties.
"You check the account?" Reebok asks him.
"Forty dollars." He looks hard at Barbara. "You got another account?"
"No. That was all I have left. I got fired from my job a few months ago. You know how that is."
"The fuck." He's busy rooting through her purse.
"Just dump it out," she says. "It's hard to find anything unless you dump it out."
He looks at her hard. He mutters something. Then he dumps it out on his lap. He finds the checkbook, checks it against the receipt from the ATM. Same account number. He doesn't find any credit cards. Any other bank cards.
"You can look through my apartment," she suggests. "It's not too far away." She looks at Reebok. "We might be more comfortable there. I have some cold pizza."
"Girl," VJ says with a different, patient tone, as if talking to an idiot, "you been carjacked. Carjacked. We're not eating your motherfucking pizza. We carjacking."
"We could sell my car for parts," she suggests. "You could strip it."
"You got any jewelry at your house?"
"You can look, but I haven't got any, no, except junk. All I've got's a cat. Some cold pizza. I could get some beer."
"The ho's retarded," Reebok says.
"I think I'm the one doing the best thinking here," Barbara points out. She spreads her hands and adds, "If you want to rape me, you should do it at my house, where it's safe. If you want to strip the car we should go do that. But we shouldn't stay here because it might call attention to us, just sitting in the parking lot."
VJ looks at Reebok. She can't read the look.
She decides it's time to make the suggestion. "I do know where there's money. Lots of it. It's in a safe, but we can get it."
Avery knows it's going to be a good one because his palms are clammy. He's sensitive to things like that. He looks at the clock on his desk. Velma is going to be in here in five minutes, with the outfit he got for her in that shop in Los Angeles, and his willy is already stirring against his thigh, with that sort of core sensation running through it, like a hot wire running back into his testicles, and his palms are clammy and the hair on the back of his neck is standing up, all from trying not to think about her coming through the door of his office with that outfit under her coat. She could be a bitch, and you could take that to the bank, but by God there was no one like her when it came to playing those little games that got his blood up. They had it down to, what, maybe twice a month now, and that was just about right. He was almost fifty, and he had to sort of apportion out his energy with this kind of thing. He needed that extra something to prime the pump, and for a woman of forty-five she sure could—
The phone rings. "Beecham Real Estate," Avery says into it.
There's a lady on the other end wants to know about his rental properties. Wonder what kind of underwear you got on, he says to her in his mind. Out loud he says, "I can ask Velma to show the place tomorrow morning. It's a great little find… no, this afternoon might be kinda hard…"
The woman goes on and on about her "needs." Her rental needs. While he pretends to listen, Avery fantasizes about getting a line on some little cookie like this, a young one, giving her a house to live in at minimal rent in exchange for nookie once in a while. Trouble is, Velma goes over all the rental accounts. She'd notice the discrepancy. There's always a snag and it's always your hag. But Velma is okay. She likes games, likes to do it in the office, in broad daylight. Long as the shades are down.
He remembers that girl in the Philippines when he was in the Navy. He shipped out two days after she said she was pregnant. Like that was an accident, her getting pregnant. But what a tail. That petite golden tail. And he remembers those paper lanterns she got from some Japanese sailor. The shifting colored light on the wall from those paper lanterns, swinging in the breeze coming through the mango tree while he worked that golden tail. Man.
Beeping tone tells him he's got another call coming in; he wriggles off the first call (love to answer your needs) and takes the second call, which is from his lawyer, the bloodsucking cocksucker. "What you going to charge me for this call, Heidekker?" Avery asks, looking out the window to see if Velma's car's in the parking lot. Don't see it. That yellow Accord, whose car is that? He knows that car, doesn't he?
"No, I'm not charging you for this call," Heidekker says. "Now listen—"
"I've about had it with you sending me a bill every time you fart in an elevator with me, pal, I got to tell you."
"Look, I just need you to sign the request for an injunction because I'm gonna run it over to Judge Chang in about an hour here—"
"Just scribble my fucking signature on it. Just get it done." Goddamn it, now Heidekker's got him thinking about Barbara, and of course his dick starts shriveling up. He tries not to think about Barbara, it shoots his nerves to hell, seeing her hang around his house, watching him in the parking lot—
"I'm not empowered, you're going to have to sign. If you want to give me power of attorney sometime, that might be a good idea and we could talk about that—"
"No, forget it, forget it, just—" There, that was Velma's Fiat pulling in. "Just don't come over for half an hour or so. I won't be in. So, this paper going to do it all?"
"This injunction's all-inclusive—she may not follow you, watch you, call you, the whole shebang. Can't come within five hundred yards. There are laws about stalking now, and we can prosecute her on them if she tries anything cute. She'll end up doing time. Which might do her good because they'd send her to a shrink. You change the locks at the office yet?"
"No, that's tomorrow morning. She might have a key, if she copied it. Frank says I should be flattered. Hey, not by the attention I get from this girl, pal."
"Anyway, we'll take care of it. I gotta go, Avery—"
"Hold on now, hold on—" Keep him talking a minute, it went with the fantasy for Velma to interrupt a business call. "I gotta talk to you about this bill you sent me for last month, this is right on the edge of outrageous, here, Heidekker—"
"Look, we can go over it item by item, but I'm going to have to charge you for the time it takes to do that—"
The door opens; Velma's taking up most of the door frame, unbuttoning her coat, her long red hair down over the white, freckled shoulders as she slips the coat away: freckles on the white, doughy titties cupped by the black lace corset, those thighs under the crotchless panties maybe a little heavy but when she's wearing crotchless red lace panties, who the fuck cares. Lot of makeup around her deep-set green eyes. Maybe she's got some crow's feet; maybe her butt's beginning to sag. But with the corset holding it all together in black and red lace, with her pink labia winking out from the golden-red bush, who the fuck, who the fuck, who the fuck cares…
"Get back to you later, Heidekker," Avery says into the phone, hanging up.
"I had to have it. I want that woodie in your pants, Av. I was touching myself and thinking about you and I had to have it, I couldn't wait. I want it here and now," she says in that husky voice she does. "Give me that big woodie." She traces her cherry-red Revlon lips with the tip of her tongue.
"It's easy to misunderstand Avery," Barbara's saying. They're in her car, in a corner of the parking lot of Avery's building. "I mean, Avery's so gruff. It's really cute how gruff he is. I gave him a stuffed bear once, with a note, it said: 'You're just a big old bear!' The way he talks is very short sometimes, and pretty blue, if you know what I mean, but he's really very, very sweet and sometimes he—"
"There any money in that place?" VJ interrupts, looking through the windshield at the little sienna-colored office building. Kind of place built in the early seventies, with those chunks of rocks on the roof, some insulation fad. "I think you frontin', girl, I don't think there's shit in there."
At least, she thinks, I've graduated from ho to girl. "He keeps a lot of cash in his safe. I think he's hiding it from the IRS. It was part of some payoff kind of thing for—"
"How much?" Reebok interrupted.
"Maybe fifty, maybe a hundred thousand dollars. It is quite a lot of money, isn't it? I never really thought about it much before…"
"That place kind of rundown, don't look like anybody in there doing that good."
"The recession killed two of the businesses that were there, and it's a little place and Avery's the only one left and he owns the building and he's gonna renovate—he's really just incredibly smart about those things, he always has these great plans for—"
"Damn shut the fuck up about the man!" Reebok snarled. "Motherfucker!"
"Fine, but just remember we can't go in there shooting because I don't want Avery to get hurt—"
"Ho, what the fuck you talkin' about—we step where we want, we got the motherfuckin' guns—"
"You need me. I know the combination to the safe."
Reebok goes tense in the backseat and shoves his gun at her. "And I know how to use this piece right here, you fuckin' whitetail bitch!"
"Then shoot me," she says, shrugging, surprising herself again. But meaning it. She doesn't care that much, really. Velma has Avery and nothing matters except Avery. That's what people don't understand. Avery belongs to her, and he is the cornerstone, and he is Man and she is Woman, and that's that, and people should understand it. "I really don't care that much," she goes on, shrugging. "Torture me. Kill me. I'm not going to do it unless we do it my way."
The muscles in VJ's jaw bunch up. He points the gun at her face.
She looks into VJ's eyes. "Do it. Kill me. Throw away the money."
VJ looks at her for a full ten seconds. Then he lowers his gun and reaches into the back, and pushes Reebok's gun down.
Right on the desk. He was doing it to her right on the desk, and he was telling her he loved her. He had her legs spread, her bony knees in his big, rough hands, and he had his pants down around his ankles, and there were zits on her thighs, she was wearing some kind of hooker costume, and…
He was telling her he loved her.
Then Avery's head snapped around to look at them, his mouth open and gasping with effort, his face mottled, forehead drippy, and he blinked at them. "She locked the office door…" Kind of blurting it. Then he focused on Barbara and realized she must have copied the keys.
Then—she can see it in his face—he realizes he's standing there with his pants down and his penis in Velma, who's propped on a desk with her legs spread, and two strange black guys are standing behind Barbara staring at him over her shoulder.
"Jesus Christ Mary Mother of God" is what comes out of him next as he pulls out his penis and grabs his pants, and Velma opens her eyes and sees Barbara and Reebok and VJ and screams.
Velma scrambles off the desk, hunching down behind it. Avery hits the silent alarm button, but it won't work; Barbara switched it off.
When Barbara was a little girl in Florida, she witnessed a hurri-cane. She was staying at her granddad's orange farm. Her grandma kept chickens, and Barbara looked through a knothole in the wall of the storm shelter and saw a chicken spreading its wings and being caught by the wind and the chicken was lifted into the sky and it disappeared up there, in the boiling air. Barbara feels now like there's a big wind behind her, pushing her into the room, only the wind is inside her, and she does what it wants to do, and it's carrying her around the room, like a tornado's whirling, carrying her around and around the desk, and it's howling out of her: "That's how she traps you, Avery! That's how she did it and she's dressed like a hooker and that's completely right because she is a whore, she's a WHORE who's trapped you with her cunt and she is an evil, evil WHORE!"
Avery has his pants up and he is seeing Reebok and VJ come into the room and he is reaching into the desk drawer. Barbara is swept up to the desk by the wind feeling, and she slams the desk drawer on his hand. "No."
Avery yelps with hurt, and when she hears that, something just lets go in Barbara; a spillway opens up in her and she thinks, I forgot what feeling good feels like. She hasn't felt this good since she was little, before some things started happening to her.
Now she finds herself drawn to the sound that Velma is making: Velma cursing under her breath as she hustles toward the side door to her office, thinking she's going to get to a phone, call 911.
Barbara looks VJ in the eye and says, "Don't let her get away, she's got the money. Shoot her in the legs."
VJ jerks out the gun—and hesitates. Velma's got her hand on the doorknob.
"Barbara, Jeezus Christ!" Avery yells, clutching his swelling hand to his stomach.
"VJ," Reebok says. "Shit. Just grab her."
"No, shoot her in the goddamn legs or we lose the money!" Barbara says, saying it big, the voice coming out of her with that storm front behind it.
Then the thunder: the gun in VJ's hand.
Velma screams and Barbara feels another release of good feeling roll through her as pieces of Velma's knees spatter the door and embed in the wall and blood gushes over the carpet. Avery bolts for the door and, feeling like a Greek goddess, Barbara points at him and commands Reebok, "Hurt that traitor with your gun! Hurt him! He's stealing everything that's ours! Stop him."
Reebok seems surprised when the gun in his hand goes off— maybe it was more a squeeze of fear in his fingers than a real decision to shoot—and a hole with little red petals on it like a small red daisy appears on Avery's back, then another—
Avery spins around, howling, mouth agape, eyes like those of a toddler terrified of a barking dog; Avery trying to fend off bullets with his pudgy fingers—she never saw before how pudgy they were—as Barbara reaches over and grabs Reebok's hand and points the gun downward at Avery's penis as his unfastened pants slip down. She pulls the trigger and the tip of his penis disappears— which she saw only that one other time, uncircumcised, with that funny little hose tip on it—and she shouts, "Now you're circumcised Avery you traitor fucking that whore you pig!"
Reebok and Avery scream at the same time almost the same way.
Then she notices Velma sobbing. Barbara crosses the room to Velma, picking up something off the desk as she goes, not really consciously noticing what it is till she's kneeling beside Velma, who's trying to crawl away, and Barbara's driving the paper spike into her neck, one of those spikes your kid makes for you in shop with a little wooden disk, still has some receipts on it getting all bloody as the nail goes ka-chunk into her neck three times, four times, and Avery is screaming louder and louder, so VJ turns to him and yells "Shut the fuck up!" and makes the top of Avery's head disappear at the same moment that Barbara drives the spike again into Velma kachunk-boom!, the nail going in right behind her ear, and Velma suddenly pees herself and stops flopping, right in mid-flop, she stops…
"Oh, fuck," Reebok is saying, sobbing as Barbara gets up, moving through a sort of sweet, warm haze as she goes to the corner of the room and points at the cabinet that has the safe hidden in it and says, "Forty-one, thirty-five, and… seven."
It's not until she's in the car, on the road, pulling onto the freeway entrance, that Barbara notices that she peed herself, too, just like Velma. That's funny. She's surprised that she doesn't really care much. She's just been surprised at herself all day. It feels good; it's like on Oprah those women talking about doing things they never thought they could do, that people said they couldn't do, and how good they felt.
She has to change her skirt, though. She won't chance stopping by her apartment, but she'll send VJ into a Ross or someplace at that new mall out east of town, on the way—she's made up her mind they're going to Nevada, Mexico would be too obvious—and he can get her some clothes for them with some of the money from the safe, almost a hundred thousand dollars… They didn't have to do discount now, they could go to Nordstrom's.
But there was the problem of Reebok. His blubbering. "You'd better quiet him down," she tells VJ softly. "The police are there by now, from all the noise, and they're going to put out an APB and they might have a description of the car from somebody, but I don't think so because no one was around, but even if they don't…" She was aware that she was talking in a rambling, on-and-on way, like she was on diet pills, but it didn't matter, you just had to get it out. You had to get it out eventually. "… even if they don't have a description, they're going to be looking for anything suspicious, and him sobbing and waving a gun around."
"VJ," Reebok says raspily, between gasping sobs, "look what this crazy bitch got us into… Look what she done."
"I got you into a hundred thousand dollars." She shrugs and passes a Ford Taurus. "But I don't think he should get any of the money, VJ," she says. "I had to do half the job for him, and he's going to panic and squeal on us." She likes using that verb from old movies, squeal. "I think you should drop him off somewhere, then we can go to Nevada and buy a new car for you, VJ, and some new clothes, maybe get you a real gold chain instead of that fake one, and you can have the watch I got in my bag, the watch I got for Avery, and some girls if you want, I don't care. Or you can have me. As much as you want. Then we have to think about some more money. I've been thinking about banks. I read an article about all the mistakes bank robbers make. How they don't move around enough, and all kinds of other mistakes, and I think we could be smarter."
VJ nods numbly.
Reebok looks at him, blinking, gaping. "VJ?"
VJ points at an exit. "That one." The exit's a good choice: Caltrans is doing a lot of construction there, though the workers have all gone home, so there's lots of cover, what with the earth-movers and all the raw wood, to hide what they are doing from people passing on the freeway, and there are places where the earth is dug out, to hide the body. VJ made a smart choice—he's the smart one of the two guys, smarter than she is, she decides, but that doesn't matter, because she is stronger than VJ in a certain way. That's what counts.
She's thinking all this as she pulls off onto South Road exit and onto a utility road, in the country, with the construction between the road and the freeway, and no one around.
She pulls the car up in a good spot. Reebok looks at them and then bursts out of the car and starts running, and she says, "VJ, you know he's going to tell, he's too scared." VJ swallows and nods, and gets out and the gun barks in his hand, and Reebok goes spinning. VJ has to shoot another time before Reebok stops yelling. Barbara, all the while, is watching the wind pinwheeling some trash by, some napkins from a Burger King… just trash blowing by…
Some more yelling. VJ has to shoot Reebok one last time…
She squints into the sky, watches a hawk teetering on an updraft.
VJ is throwing up now. He'll feel better after throwing up. Throwing up always leaves a bad taste in the mouth, though.
She wonders what VJ's penis will taste like. It will probably taste okay. He seems clean.
And VJ's smart, and handsomer than Avery, and much younger, and she knows they belong together, she can feel it. It's cute how VJ tries to hide it, but she can see it in his eyes when he thinks she's not watching: he loves her. He does.