Read Small Mercies Online

Authors: Eddie Joyce

Small Mercies (33 page)

Well, maybe not exactly the way Bobby would have.

Still, he made it a point to hang out with Kieran every few months, go to a movie or take him to dinner, even invite him over when the whole family got together for Sunday dinners.

But in the past few years, the fat fuck had somehow managed to convince a girl to marry him, get promoted at his job, even buy a house. Now when they hung out together, it seemed like Kieran was doing Franky a favor instead of the other way around. So every once in a while, Franky had to put him in his place, restore the natural order of things. He’d wait a few minutes, then call Kieran again, semi-apologize, and bribe the fat bastard by offering to buy him lunch. Worked every time.

The phone rings and Franky answers reflexively.

“Fuckwad! Back so soon?”

“Francis?”

Only his mom calls him Francis.

“Hey, Mom, what’s up?” he says, sheepish.

“Who were you expecting?”

“Joking around with Kieran Kielty.”

“How is Kieran?”

His mother has a soft spot for Kieran, but she would have asked after whomever he mentioned, no matter who it was. He and Bobby used to joke about it.

And how is Adolf doing? Still have that silly mustache?

“He’s fine.”

“And Megan?”

How the fuck should he know how Kieran Kielty’s wife was?

“Fine, I think,” he says, unable to hide his irritation. “What’s up with you?”

“Out doing the shopping for tomorrow.”

“What’s on the menu?”

“Well, your father was gonna grill, but it looks like rain so it may be pasta and gravy. Some antipasto.”

“Get those breadsticks that you wrap the salami around.”

“I will.”

“You heard about the pool?”

“Sad.”

“Tell me about it.”

A few beats pass. Franky can hear the sound of people ordering from a butcher’s counter in the background.

“Everything all right, Franky?”

“Right as rain. Was wondering, what should I get little Bobby?”

“Oh, Franky, whatever you get, I’m sure he’ll love.”

“I know, but what’s he into these days?”

“He’s starting baseball in a few weeks. Tina says he’s into dinosaurs again, but . . .”

Her voice trails off. A few more silent beats. It’s his turn to ask.

“Mom, everything all right?”

“Listen, Franky, there’s something I need to tell you.”

“What’s up?”

“Tina’s bringing someone tomorrow.”

His face feels hot, all of a sudden.

“Like a boyfriend?”

“Not ‘like’ a boyfriend. A boyfriend.”

He stands up and walks into the kitchen, opens the fridge. One fucking Heineken? It’ll have to do.

“You met this guy yet, Ma?”

“No, not yet.”

The first swig of beer tastes like broken glass, but the second is manageable. The third is almost pleasant.

“It’s a little fucked up that he’s coming, no?”

“I’m not sure how I feel about it.”

“I think it’s fucked up.”

“Well, we need to respect her wishes. It’s her son’s birthday and she thinks it’s important that her friend is there.”

“What’s this asshole’s name?”

“Franky, he’s not an asshole.” She waits a beat. “His name is Wade.”

“Wade?” he says, as sarcastically as possible. “Let me guess, he’s not a firefighter?”

“No. He’s not.”

“Not a cop, either.”

“No.”

“And with a name like Wade, he sure as shit isn’t from the rock.”

“No,” she says, the wind kicked out of her sails.

“Of course not.”

The fucking Heineken is empty and he’s got nothing else, not even a drip of Jameson. Or even Powers. He’d do a shot of paint thinner if he had it. He wants to punch the wall, punch it until his knuckles bleed and his bones crack. This is bullshit.

“He’s a friend of your brother’s.”

“Bullshit. I know all of Bobby’s friends. He doesn’t have any . . .”

He realizes she’s talking about Peter.

“He’s a lawyer?”

“I’m not sure. I don’t think so.”

A friend of Peter’s. Great. Another stuck-up asshole. Tomorrow was gonna be tough enough with Peter and his judgment and disapproval.

“Franky, I need you to do me a favor.”

“What?” He nearly shouts at her.

Her voice lowers to a whisper.

“I need you to show up sober and I need you not to cause a scene.”

His temples are pounding. He tries to coax another swig from the empty bottle.

“Was it really necessary to ask me that?” he say, knowing it probably was. Her disappointment is the one thing he cannot tolerate and they both know it.

“I’m sorry, Franky.”

“Yeah,” he says, searching for something to say. “Yeah, me too. I’m fucking sorry too.”

He flings the phone onto the couch.

Fine. He’ll be sober tomorrow. He’ll be a fucking saint.

But today is a different story.

* * *

By the time Kieran picks him up at Kelly’s to drive him to the mall, Franky is four beers in and the day has been draped in a soft gray blanket. He has decided not to give a fuck about Wade or Tina or Peter or his mother; he’ll make a day of it and fuck the rest. It’s all bullshit anyway. When Kieran’s busted blue Camry pulls in front of the bar, things are already looking up; he put four hundred on North Carolina minus three and they’re up seven at the half. He does a quick shot for good measure before walking out into the harsh daylight of early afternoon.

“Christ, Kielty,” he says as he gets into the passenger seat. “Is it possible that you’re even fatter than the last time I saw you?”

Kieran looks out the side window, away from Franky. He takes his Coke-bottle glasses off with one hand and pinches his nose with the other. He
has
gotten fatter; he’s wedged between the seat and the steering wheel and the lower folds of his stomach are peeking out from below his powder blue golf shirt. His face is a sheen of greasy acne and his brown hair is pocked with yellowish-white spots.

“I’m not taking you unless you’re nice to me,” Kieran says, still facing the street. When he hears Kieran’s voice, Franky realizes that he’s close to tears.

“Kieran, Christ. I’m only busting balls. That’s what friends do.”

Kieran puts his glasses back on and wipes his nose with the back of his hand. A thin film of snot attaches to the meaty bulge where his thumb and index finger meet.

“Megan says that you’re not a real friend to me. That you use me when you need me. Like today.”

Franky doesn’t need this, doesn’t have the patience to reason with this whimpering half-wit. If he only had a fucking car. He swallows hard, puts a hand on Kieran’s shoulder. He hopes no one inside Kelly’s is watching through the window.

“Kieran. I’m sorry I was rude.”

He tries to sound sincere. Kieran’s eyes—huge and hopeful behind his glasses—shift toward him.

“It’s all right. Megan doesn’t think I stand up for myself.”

The unabashed meekness of Kieran’s voice makes Franky want to smack him. He reminds himself that Bobby loved Kieran, would have wanted him looked after.

“Megan doesn’t know what the fuck she’s talking about. We’ve been friends for years. Remember when we went down to Atlantic City for the weekend? Or the night we ended up at FlashDancers and I paid that Russian chick to give you like, what? Twenty lap dances? Megan doesn’t know about that, right?”

Kieran’s face goes a shade whiter than usual.

“You’re not gonna tell her?” he asks. It takes Franky a beat to recognize that his concern is serious.

“Jesus Christ, Kielty. Of course not. That’s my whole fucking point.” This was beyond useless; it was like talking to an infant. “Megan doesn’t understand everything about how guys hang out. Like how guys bust each other’s balls.”

“I don’t bust your balls, Franky.”

“But you could, kemosabe. You could. And that would be fine.”

He watches as the logic circulates through Kielty’s enormous cranium, eventually turning his gray lips up into kind of a half smile. Franky smiles back.

“Okay?”

“Okay.”

Kielty puts the keys in the ignition. He looks over at Franky again, his hand paused in mid-twist.

“You’ll take me to Applebee’s for lunch?”

Jesus H. Christ,
Franky thinks,
that’s exactly what you need. Another meal.

But he nods agreeably.

“Applebee’s. Chili’s. McDonald’s. Burger King. Whatever the fuck you want.”

Kielty’s smile expands. He turns the key and the car struggles to life. The fog of good cheer has been lifted during this conversation, a combination of Kielty’s incessant simpering and the sunlight glaring off the hood. And the mall is a twenty-minute ride. Franky needs a restorative shot. Maybe two.

“Hold on, Kieran. We’ve been talking so long I need to piss.”

He gets out of the car and walks back into Kelly’s. He puts a crinkled ten on the bar and orders a Jameson. He checks the score in the Carolina game.

Tied with twelve minutes left. What the fuck happened?

The daytime bartender, some bald grump with no personality, pours the golden liquid into an impossibly small vessel. Franky downs it with a quick shift of the head, the whiskey tingling his lips and tongue.

He walks to the bathroom as the beer and the booze slosh around his otherwise empty stomach. He needs to eat something. He’s getting ahead of himself. He’s right back where he was last night before the curtain fell: no pain, not a care in the world. He takes a long piss, one hand pressed against the wall.

He walks back to the bar, claps excitedly as a Carolina player nails a three. He needs another shot. One more will do the trick, keep the day rolling in the right direction. He watches the bartender pour the whiskey, watches as a meniscus forms at the lip of the glass.

“One more,” he says as he lifts the shot glass. “One more then out the door.”

* * *

By the time they reach the mall, Franky is furious. He spent the entire car ride listening to Kielty lament the end of the Cody’s pool in the most simplistic, repetitive fashion imaginable. His buzz has started to drift and his stomach is in full protest after being ignored all morning. But it’s not any of that.

It’s his mother and her fucking favor. Show up sober and not cause a scene? Seriously, was that really necessary? Bobby’s his nephew, his godson. Did she really think he would ruin the kid’s fucking birthday? Wasn’t he here now, at the goddamn mall of all fucking places suffering through the company of Kieran fucking Kielty, all so he could get the kid a proper present?

The whole thing could drive a saint to drink. And he was no saint. He knew that much about himself.

He hates the mall, hasn’t been in years. Everywhere he looks, he sees the reasons why: chain-wearing guidos with spiked-up hair, over-tanned mothers in bright, skintight jumpsuits, a group of cocky black teenagers wearing red Yankee hats, the labels still attached, the brims as straight as diving boards. There are more Russians than the last time he was here, but that was no surprise; they were moving onto the Island in droves, always looking for beachfront property, no matter how shitty the beach. Thank God it was a Saturday. At least there wouldn’t be any fucking Hasids.

He spots a Foot Locker a few storefronts down and heads for it. Kielty is a few paces behind him, trying to avoid cataclysmic collisions with other obese mall goers.

Then Franky sees something and, for a second, he thinks he’s hallucinating. He shakes his head, but there they are: a cluster of women in hijabs, that tongue-clacking filth ricocheting between them. He stops walking as they approach. They float right through him, one momentarily disengaging from her two companions, stepping outside him and then returning to her friends after she passes him. He watches them glide away, only their feet visible beneath the long draping sheets.

Kielty catches up with him, follows his gaze.

“What’s up, Franky?”

“Fucking Arabs?” he says, loudly.

“I guess.”

“There are fucking Arabs at the Staten Island Mall now?”

A few passing teenage kids looked at him uncertainly, like maybe he’s making a joke or they’re being filmed. Kielty shrugs his shoulders, sending his entire upper torso jiggling.

“I guess.”

Franky looks around, sees mostly regular people milling around, flitting into stores, carrying shopping bags, sipping from oversize Styrofoam cups. But in the cell phone store across from him, he notices an Arab with a mustache comparing cell phone chargers. He’s wearing an old-fashioned New York Giants jacket, the once shiny blue now faded and dusty. A small, dark-skinned boy holds his hand.

Arabs in the Staten Island Mall. Un-fucking-believable.

“It’s finally done. They finally destroyed it completely,” he announces to Kielty and a handful of confused passersby. “This Island is completely and totally fucked.”

He walks into Foot Locker, hands raised in exasperation.

* * *

“Look, they have the new ’Melo jerseys,” Kielty says, holding up a kid’s blue and orange jersey so Franky can see. “These are pretty sweet. Little Bobby’d love this.”

Franky eyes it doubtfully. He feels better now that he’s in the Foot Locker, surrounded by sneakers and mesh shorts and all the other accoutrements of athletic endeavor. He feels like an athlete even though he hasn’t shot a ball, not even men’s league, in five years. Somehow, in here, it doesn’t matter. His belief that all he needs is a new pair of kicks and five weeks to train and he could be back in game shape seems reasonable in this place. The tools are available; all he has to do is decide to do it.

Plus, Carolina covered, cutting into the hole he’s in. The day is maybe halfway salvageable. He shakes his head at the Carmelo jersey.

“Can’t do it, Double K. Every gindaloon on the South Shore will be wearing one. Every fat little Ant’nee who fancies himself a baller will be rocking this.”

A little frown from Kielty.

“What?”

“You’re Italian. So is Bobby Jr. So was Bobby.”

“Half Italian, but not a gindaloon. Half Irish, but not a fucking donkey either. It’s not complicated, Kielty. Don’t hurt yourself thinking.”

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