Winter Prey
floor at her feet. A round cardboard tray, marked with scrapings of chocolate-cake frosting, sat on a spindly-legged TV-dinner table. An aluminum ashtray was piled with cigarette butts, and she’d just dropped another burning butt into the hole of a mostly empty Coke can. The butt guttered in the dampness at the bottom, and the stench of burning wet tobacco curdled the air; and beneath that, the smell of old coffee grounds, spoiled bananas, rotting hamburger.
On the “Wheel of Fortune,” the contestants had found the letters T - - - - n-t- - - - n - n -. She stared at them, moving her lips. Turn? No, it couldn’t be “turn,” you just thought that because you could see the t’ s and the n’ s.
Huh. Could be two . . . ?
The truck rattled into the driveway and her heart skipped. The girl hopped to her feet, peered out the window, saw him climbing down, felt her breath thicken in her chest. His headlights were still on and he walked around to the front of the truck, peered at a tire. Sometimes, in her young-old eyes, he looked like a dork. He weighed too much, and had that turned-in look, like he wasn’t really in touch with the world. He had temper tantrums, and did things he was sorry for. Hit her. Hit Mark. Always apologized . . .
At other times, when he was with her, or with Mark or Rosie or the others, when they were having a fuck-in . . . then he was different. The yellow-haired girl had seen a penned wolf once. The wolf sat behind a chain-link fence and looked her over with its yellow eyes. The eyes said, If only I was out there . . .
His eyes were like that, sometimes. She shivered: he was no dork when he looked like that. He was something else.
And he was good to her. Brought her gifts. Nobody had ever brought her gifts—not good ones, anyway—before him. Her mom might get her a dress that she bought at the secondhand, or some jeans at K Mart. But he’d given her a Walkman and a bunch of tapes, probably twenty now. He bought her Chic jeans and a bustier and twice had brought her flowers. Carnations.
And he took her to dinner. First he got a book from the library that told about the different kinds of silverware—the narrow forks for meat, the wide forks for salad, the little knives for butter. After she knew them all, they talked about the different kinds of salads, and the entrées, and the soups and desserts. About scooping the soup spoon away from you, rather than toward you; about keeping your left hand in your lap.
When she was ready, they did it for real. She got a dress from Rosie, off-the-shoulder, and some black flats. He took her to Duluth, to the Holiday Inn. She’d been awed by the dining room, with the view of Superior. Two kinds of wine, red and white. She’d remember it forever.
She loved him.
Her old man had moved away two years before, driven out by Rosie and her mom, six months before the cancer had killed her mom. All her old man had ever given her were black eyes—and once he’d hit her in the side, just below her armpit, so hard that she almost couldn’t breathe for a month and thought she was going to die.
He was worse with Rosie: he tried to fuck Rosie and everybody knew that wasn’t right; and when Rosie wouldn’t fuck him, he’d given her to Russ Harper for some tires.
When he’d started looking at the yellow-haired girl—started showing himself, started peeing with the bathroom door open when he knew she’d walk by, when he came busting in when she was in the shower—that’s when Rosie and her mom had run him off.
Not that they’d had to.
Her old man had worn shapeless overalls, usually covered with dirt, and old-fashioned sleeveless undershirts that showed off his fat gut, hanging from his chest like a pig in a hammock. She couldn’t talk to him, much less look at him. If he’d ever come into her bedroom after her, she’d kill him.
Had told him that.
And she would have.
This man was different. His voice was soft, and when he touched her face he did it with his fingertips or the backs of his fingers. He never hit her. Never. He was educated. Told her about things; told her about sophisticated women and the things they had to know. About sophisticated love.
He loved her and she loved him.
The yellow-haired girl tiptoed into the back of the double-wide and looked into the bedroom. Rosie was facedown on the bed, asleep, a triangle of light from the hallway crossing her back. One leg thrust straight down the bed and was wrapped
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